Zürcher Nachrichten - Colombia extradites drug lord 'Otoniel' to US

EUR -
AED 4.148327
AFN 77.874982
ALL 98.004573
AMD 434.312378
ANG 2.021311
AOA 1036.256845
ARS 1310.405744
AUD 1.75711
AWG 2.03438
AZN 1.913657
BAM 1.950846
BBD 2.281067
BDT 138.05306
BGN 1.955826
BHD 0.42578
BIF 3362.778801
BMD 1.129427
BND 1.45523
BOB 7.806451
BRL 6.432995
BSD 1.129771
BTN 96.411562
BWP 15.184973
BYN 3.697209
BYR 22136.762273
BZD 2.269317
CAD 1.561523
CDF 3235.807336
CHF 0.933732
CLF 0.027649
CLP 1061.00628
CNY 8.136727
CNH 8.123073
COP 4659.122097
CRC 574.261911
CUC 1.129427
CUP 29.929806
CVE 109.988589
CZK 24.936648
DJF 200.721816
DKK 7.457367
DOP 66.70296
DZD 149.384266
EGP 56.234339
ERN 16.9414
ETB 154.492713
FJD 2.555332
FKP 0.836478
GBP 0.838317
GEL 3.094342
GGP 0.836478
GHS 11.636859
GIP 0.836478
GMD 81.318305
GNF 9788.400845
GTQ 8.676196
GYD 236.717204
HKD 8.853824
HNL 29.42605
HRK 7.535305
HTG 147.710099
HUF 403.527767
IDR 18403.103664
ILS 3.965846
IMP 0.836478
INR 96.449421
IQD 1479.993743
IRR 47577.097359
ISK 144.194439
JEP 0.836478
JMD 179.972931
JOD 0.800813
JPY 163.578233
KES 145.978771
KGS 98.768678
KHR 4522.59426
KMF 490.73844
KPW 1016.448161
KRW 1551.696337
KWD 0.346824
KYD 0.941442
KZT 577.997439
LAK 24395.906836
LBP 101226.305212
LKR 338.362659
LRD 225.954157
LSL 20.226469
LTL 3.334903
LVL 0.683179
LYD 6.176314
MAD 10.458617
MDL 19.528097
MGA 5127.160369
MKD 61.513304
MMK 2371.370492
MNT 4039.327386
MOP 9.122056
MRU 44.713631
MUR 51.52472
MVR 17.461172
MWK 1958.994212
MXN 21.894004
MYR 4.771812
MZN 72.181899
NAD 20.226648
NGN 1792.140279
NIO 41.575517
NOK 11.490216
NPR 154.258699
NZD 1.893867
OMR 0.434273
PAB 1.129771
PEN 4.113462
PGK 4.705175
PHP 62.731727
PKR 319.580395
PLN 4.235635
PYG 9024.281197
QAR 4.118731
RON 5.049326
RSD 117.217578
RUB 90.210136
RWF 1596.900979
SAR 4.236487
SBD 9.431579
SCR 16.618368
SDG 678.217283
SEK 10.891728
SGD 1.456175
SHP 0.887552
SLE 25.660347
SLL 23683.512306
SOS 645.683056
SRD 41.96893
STD 23376.85128
SVC 9.885158
SYP 14684.622542
SZL 20.215376
THB 36.909996
TJS 11.269379
TMT 3.95864
TND 3.378993
TOP 2.645232
TRY 44.136615
TTD 7.668796
TWD 33.773473
TZS 3046.629067
UAH 46.952305
UGX 4115.656974
USD 1.129427
UYU 46.96198
UZS 14559.410856
VES 107.122193
VND 29331.210011
VUV 136.762688
WST 3.112232
XAF 654.306873
XAG 0.034185
XAU 0.000342
XCD 3.052332
XDR 0.812908
XOF 654.309763
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.411164
ZAR 20.24242
ZMK 10166.197576
ZMW 29.854238
ZWL 363.674919
  • RBGPF

    2.5600

    65.56

    +3.9%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    11.65

    +0.69%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.09

    -0.18%

  • RELX

    -0.6100

    55.05

    -1.11%

  • BCC

    -2.8100

    86.73

    -3.24%

  • CMSD

    -0.0800

    22.05

    -0.36%

  • SCS

    -0.2100

    10.29

    -2.04%

  • NGG

    -2.0300

    72.67

    -2.79%

  • RIO

    -0.8500

    59.95

    -1.42%

  • GSK

    -0.2600

    39.18

    -0.66%

  • VOD

    -0.1100

    10.39

    -1.06%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    12.74

    -0.63%

  • BCE

    -0.3200

    21.16

    -1.51%

  • BTI

    -0.1700

    45.09

    -0.38%

  • BP

    -0.2100

    28.94

    -0.73%

  • AZN

    -0.5800

    70.38

    -0.82%

Colombia extradites drug lord 'Otoniel' to US
Colombia extradites drug lord 'Otoniel' to US / Photo: - - Colombian Presidency/AFP

Colombia extradites drug lord 'Otoniel' to US

One of Colombia's most notorious drug lords was extradited Wednesday to the United States to face drug trafficking charges, announced President Ivan Duque.

Text size:

"I want to reveal that Dairo Antonio Usuga, alias 'Otoniel' has been extradited," Duque said on Twitter, calling him "the most dangerous drug trafficker in the world."

Usuga, 50, was the most wanted person in Colombia until he was arrested last October in the northwest of the country after a massive military operation.

Duque described Usuga as a "murderer of social leaders and police, an abuser of boys, girls and teenagers."

"Today legality, the rule of law, the security forces and justice triumphed," he added.

On Wednesday afternoon, a convoy of five bulletproof police vehicles transported Usuga from a prison in the capital Bogota to a military airport, where he was handed over to US Drug Enforcement Administration officials.

Images shared by local media showed a handcuffed Usuga seated in an airplane alongside Colombian police and an Interpol official.

Usuga was the leader of Colombia's largest narco-trafficking gang, known as the Gulf Clan.

He was captured near the border with Panama following a military operation involving 500 soldiers backed by 22 helicopters, in which one police officer was killed.

His arrest was one of the biggest blows to Colombia's drug trafficking business since the assassination of Pablo Escobar in 1993.

Usuga was indicted in 2009 in the United States, which had offered a $5 million bounty for information leading to his arrest.

The United States accuses Usuga and the Gulf Clan of illegally bringing at least 73 tons of cocaine into the country between 2003 and 2012.

Following Usuga's arrest and that of another 90 suspected gang members, Duque declared the "end" of the Gulf Clan.

However, four Colombian soldiers were killed in attacks blamed on the gang just days after Usuga's arrest.

The Gulf Clan was believed to be responsible for 30 percent of cocaine exports from Colombia, the world's largest producer and supplier of the drug.

- 'Who is afraid of Otoniel?' -

Since his capture, Usuga has been held in a high-security prison in Bogota, and has been at the heart of multiple controversies.

Recordings of testimony "Otoniel" gave to the Truth Commission -- an extrajudicial body investigating the decades-long conflict between the government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) -- were stolen, the perpetrators unknown.

Colombian police also halted one of Usuga's Truth Commission hearings, saying the Gulf Clan had organized an escape attempt.

"Who is afraid of Otoniel?" read a headline on Cambio, an independent online news outlet, which charged that some people in the Colombian government sought to silence the drug lord.

The site reported Usuga would have said during his hearings that the army continued to work in complicity with right-wing paramilitaries in some parts of the country.

Citing a leaked Truth Commission document, the outlet said "Otoniel" had implicated 63 people as linked to the Gulf Clan, including a former minister, a former national director of intelligence, six former governors and four former members of parliament.

Family members of Usuga's victims had asked for the courts to suspend his extradition, arguing that he should stand trial in Colombia for "crimes against humanity."

But the Colombian justice system ultimately gave the green light for his extradition, Usuga's defense team told AFP.

Duque vowed that Usuga would still face justice in Colombia.

"This criminal was extradited to serve drug trafficking sentences in the United States," the president said.

"But I want to be clear that once those are served, he will return to Colombia to pay for the crimes committed against our country."

N.Fischer--NZN