logo
£96m of cocaine seized from vessel at UK port

£96m of cocaine seized from vessel at UK port

BBC News29-06-2025
Border Force
Cocaine with a street value of almost £100m has been seized by Border Force officers in "one of the largest drugs busts of the past decade".
The shipment was intercepted earlier this month on a container vessel arriving at London Gateway port from Panama.
Border Force officials and staff at the port in Stanford-le-Hope, Essex, had to move 37 large containers to locate the 2.4-tonne haul.
Worth an estimated £96m, it was the sixth largest cocaine seizure since records began, the Home Office said.
Specialist maritime officers intercepted the drugs after an "intelligence-led operation".
Border Force said in a statement: "The interception strikes a significant financial and operational blow against the organised crime groups behind its importation and is an example of an intelligence driven outcome to disrupt criminal supply chains."
Charlie Eastaugh, the organisation's maritime director, said: "This seizure - one of the largest of its kind - is just one example of how dedicated Border Force maritime officers remain one step ahead of the criminal gangs who threaten our security.
"Our message to these criminals is clear. More than ever before, we are using intelligence and international law enforcement co-operation to disrupt and dismantle your operations."
He added there were also training programmes across Latin America to help prevent the drugs entering British shores.
DPWORLD
Government minister Seema Malhotra, said: "Drugs gangs trying to import illegal substances into the UK are a blight on society and we will leave no stone left unturned in our pursuit of organised crime gangs inflicting addiction, misery and death upon Britain's communities."
Follow Essex news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.
Related internet links
Border Force
Stanford-le-Hope
West Thurrock
UK Border Agency
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Drivers could be fined £100 for revving their engines in affluent London enclave by Labour-run council
Drivers could be fined £100 for revving their engines in affluent London enclave by Labour-run council

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Drivers could be fined £100 for revving their engines in affluent London enclave by Labour-run council

Drivers could be fined £100 by a Labour-run council for revving their engines in an affluent London enclave. Westminster City Council is planning to clamp down on 'sudden and/or rapid acceleration' in Soho and Mayfair between the hours of 12pm and 6am and could use 'acoustic enforcement cameras' to catch culprits. The local authority is seeking to extend its Public Spaces Protection Order (PSPO) which currently covers most of St James's, Knightsbridge and Belgravia, due to concerns over 'a problem with anti-social vehicle use in the West End'. Such issues are believed to be particularly prevalent on Bond Street, near the tourist hotspots of Piccadilly and Oxford Street, with a concern that public safety is being 'undermined' with roads in the area also taking a battering. Just three weeks ago, police were called to New Bond Street in the early hours of the morning after a 'large group of masked individuals' with 30 cars and 20 bikes gathered on the street and attacked a bus with smoke canisters. A report brought forward to extend the current PSPO is now before Cllr Aicha Less, the council's deputy leader, with a final decision to be made on August 20 before being quickly implemented, if approved, next week. Cllr Less previously said: 'If you are looking to meet up with cars like this, our streets are not the place for it.' A person would become in breach of the the order if they are to cause a public nuisance by: A fleet of expensive luxury sport cars were seen in central London ahead of a meet last year Westminster City Council say they have issued 368 fixed penalty notices over the last three years for alleged violations of the order, many for illegal meets on Exhibition Road, South Kensington. Evidence collected by the New West End Company (NWEC) revealed that police had to be called 25 times out of 33 recorded car meets in New Bond Street between April 2023 to June 2025. The NWEC said the average number of vehicles attending the car meets is 63, with the Metropolitan Police deploying a vehicle to the area on 14 occasions during that timeframe. An extract from the council report reads: 'The impact of this behaviour is a growing concern for the public, local businesses, and the Council. 'Tyre burnouts leave lasting skid marks on road surfaces, contributing to the visual deterioration of a high-profile retail area and necessitating more frequent resurfacing at a cost to the Council and its partners. 'Additionally, evidence gathered by NWEC indicates that anti-social vehicle use is disrupting retail security systems, triggering false alarms and leading to the unnecessary deployment of costly resources such as security fog systems, which are activated by the loud disturbances.' The acoustic cameras, which would be used to catch breaches of the order if the proposals are approved, are activated when they detect events over 80-90 decibels - which is as loud as standing next to a passing London Underground train. The camera then uses AI to differentiate an engine's sound from a typical car horn by monitoring the sound patterns. Cllr Max Sullivan, the council's cabinet minister for streets, pledged that the council would take a 'zero-tolerance approach' to such behaviour and labelled dangerous driving 'a blight on our streets'. He added that they would work with the Met 'to tackle illegal car meets head-on'. Soho Society chairman Tim Lord told the Local Democracy Reporting Service: 'We have had a spate of motorbike racing late at night which appears to be dangerous and is incomprehensibly loud and frightening for visitors, residents and businesses.' The Daily Mail has approached Westminster City Council for comment.

I'm so fed up after my nightmare neighbour keeps doing the same annoying thing in our garden every single day
I'm so fed up after my nightmare neighbour keeps doing the same annoying thing in our garden every single day

The Sun

time2 hours ago

  • The Sun

I'm so fed up after my nightmare neighbour keeps doing the same annoying thing in our garden every single day

A MUM has been left fuming after claiming her 'nightmare neighbour' has been leaving her garden a tip by throwing things over the fence. Daisy, who has two toddlers, shared how she kept waking up to branches and leaves strewn in her back garden. 2 2 In a clip on her @dees_days, she shared: 'When your neighbour is an absolute nightmare! 'And continues to throw her branches and leaves over our fence every day. What do I do????! 'I am at a loss for words, my neighbour is getting worse !!! 'We have emailed asking for peace and to understand why they are so insane... help!!!!!' She even showed a clip which appeared to show her neighbour's hand throwing the debris over the fence. The angry mum also claimed she hadn't stopped there, and once threw some wood over which had some nails which 'injured' her child. Many people sympathised with her plight, and were quick to rush to the comments with their take. One said: 'I have ideas... TikTok will block me.' Another added: 'My neighbor does this as well. Some is from my own trees but hers as well.' A third suggested: 'Gather everything and kindly place it on her front doorstep.' However, one pointed out: 'That's half a story, I wonder what's her take also.' Your kids are breaking law if they kick their ball over neighbour's fence, High Court rules after couple sued next door Daisy replied to the revenge comments saying: 'That video is making me laugh because everyone is telling me to put, like, electric fence or a topper.' She added: 'We can't put a topper on, we've already asked. 'We asked to put a topper over the fence because we can see straight into her garden, she can see straight into ours and it's very uncomfortable, but, yeah, she said no. 'She asked us to move our pool pump because it was too loud and if we moved the pool pump, then she would allow us to put the topper on. 'So, no, we try not to retaliate and we don't do anything to cause any tension. We just want peace. We have two kids. We wanna live a happy life.' GARDEN ROWS It turns out there are lots of jobs that could land you in trouble with your neighbour and the law, fortunately, gardening experts over at Toolstation have given some advice. If you have a tree in your garden you want to get rid of you better think twice and do your research. The gardening experts reveal: 'If one neighbour wishes to remove or heavily prune a tree that the other neighbour values, disputes can arise over the impact on the view, shade, or privacy. " While it might cause a row, if it is in your property boundary it is ultimately your choice, unless it has a Tree Protection Order on it. 'But, some trees may be protected by a Tree Protection Order which makes it an offence to uproot, top or destroy them, the experts warn. The maximum fine for breaking this law is £20,000, so make sure you double check if it does have a TPO. You can find out by contacting your local council for a map that shows this information. Alternatively, you can ask to speak with your local tree officer.

I'm a professional trader, and even I lost £13k to convincing pump and dump scam
I'm a professional trader, and even I lost £13k to convincing pump and dump scam

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

I'm a professional trader, and even I lost £13k to convincing pump and dump scam

'They sounded like professionals,' James says of the scammers that stole thousands from him in the blink of an eye. He should know. The 39-year-old from London whose name has been changed, is a senior professional working in financial markets for a UK bank. He told This is Money: 'They were posting multiple times per day, market news and updates… the posts they were doing on macroeconomic events were tying in with everything I was reading and everything I knew. 'It sounded and looked very professional,' he added. When the price of the stock he had been buying, which had been recommended by the scammers, tumbled from £30 to just $1.65, James was shocked. > Read This is Money's full investigation of this pump and dump scam Over the course of six weeks, James had invested £13,000 into a Chinese company, Pheton Holdings, which is listed on the US Nasdaq, via his trading platform of choice - Robinhood. In the days before the share price crashed, James had withdrawn his investment, having doubled his money. But the temptation proved too great. He said: 'I saw the price drop by a couple of dollars.' James bought back in on the hopes of making more money when the price corrected. What James, alongside thousands of other shareholders, didn't know is that Pheton Holdings was being pumped by scammers who already owned stock in the company. When the share price fell, it was because the scammers had sold their own significant positions for enormous profits. In other words, they cash a very large cheque, and the victims lose everything. Pheton is just one of a number of US penny stocks that scammers have been promoting to investors using deepfake social media adverts showing well-known figures from the financial sector. James' experience began with an advert on Facebook. 'Your phone picks up the searches you are doing, and the algorithm feeds you particular ads on Facebook,' he said. 'I'm not big on social media and stuff like that, I got taken in quite easily.' 'I normally stay away from these ads, but the new ones are relying on AI, so I saw who I thought was the founder of Revolut talking about how he is setting up a trading fund.' Initially, James invested just £1,000, but as time progressed, and the share price of Pheton Holdings kept rising, he started getting drawn in. 'The calls that they were making were right. The communication was very professional,' he said. All the while, the other members of the WhatsApp investing group that he was in were actively discussing the investment. 'It seemed like a very genuine group,' James said, 'and in the evenings they said they were holding sessions to help teach more to novice traders.' Now, James believes that most of the other members of his investment group were bots or other scammers. Having spoken to other victims, he says there could be hundreds of WhatsApp groups just like the one he was part of. Some of these victims lost a lot more money than James. He said: 'I am doing very well in my career. From a monetary perspective, I'll recover the loss within a couple of months. 'It's fine for me, there are other victims I spoke to that have lost over £250,000, their life savings.' He added: 'It was more the embarrassment… I work in financial markets, I do this day in day out, and I didn't see through this scam.' Understandably, victims often don't like speaking about losing money to scammers. When James told his father about losing money, his dad revealed that around five years ago he had lost £42,000 in an online investment scam, something he had never told James. James' uncle lost over £100,000 in the same scam. He said: 'It was a pump and dump scam. It was just a different way that they'd approached it - rather than going through WhatsApp and Facebook they set up trading communities online, and of course there was no AI.' 'This stuff's been going around for a long time.' With the rapid advancement of AI though, these scams are becoming increasingly prevalent, and ever harder to detect.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store