When 100 bricks of cocaine washed-up on Fiji's shores, it was a sign of something more sinister

The Pacific islands have become a transit point for international crime syndicates smuggling drugs to from the Americas to Australia. Now, SBS Dateline has discovered that Australian tourists are smuggling significant amounts of high-grade cocaine into Australia on commercial flights from Fiji.

 Moala Pastor Jitoko

Moala Pastor Jitoko (centre) found a cocaine package washed-up on the shore of his village. Source: Will Reid/Dateline

Shipments of cocaine from Mexico and Colombia are being dropped-off in Pacific island nations, typically Fiji, from where they are transhipped for trafficking into the high-value markets of Australia and New Zealand.

The volume is so significant, villagers in the Fijian island of Moala, in the eastern Lau Group, have found kilogram bricks of Mexican cocaine washed up on their idyllic beaches.

Police and villagers told Dateline that young children had started to eat the contents, which was branded with a bull image, thinking it was milk powder.

“Children are curious,” says villager Tys, who shared  video a of police interviewing one of the young boys who found the packages.

“We worry for our children, they will open up and try these things, it could be really dangerous.”

Fijian Customs told Dateline, over 100 bricks of cocaine, all of which had the same branding, have washed up on numerous Islands across Fiji. Police believe the cocaine had been dropped off, possibly underwater, with a transponder attached so another small vessel could collect the shipment and take it to Australia or New Zealand.
Fiji shores
Fijian leaders and authorities are concerned the Pacific islands could become semi-narco nations. Source: Will Reid/Dateline
The criminal entities involved in cocaine trafficking for Australia’s high-paying party-goers are now bringing something much more dangerous to Fiji’s pristine Pacific shores.

Large quantities of highly-addictive methamphetamine, known as ice, is now readily available on Fijian streets. There is so much of it that street prices have virtually halved in the past year, making it much more widely available to an increasingly younger age group.

Australian tourists buying drugs

A local meth dealer, Louis*, told Dateline ice prices had plummeted since last year and that he now sells on the street for to both locals and Australia tourists for round $50AUD per bag.

He said Australians were also buying cocaine, and that he had set up a contact for an Australian man who had wanted to buy a kilogram of cocaine to take back to Australia. He told Dateline the man had strapped it to his body and flown back to Australia

“How do you know he made it through?” he was asked.

“Because he came back for a second kilo,” was the reply.

Fiji’s veteran anti-drugs Assistant Superintendent Anare Masitabua told Dateline that Fiji is paying the price for Australia's drug habit.

“Australia is actually one of the big users of all these drugs."

Although thankful for all the assistance Australia gives Fiji, Assistant Superintendent Masitabua is worried about the vast sums of money and the potential it has to corrupt Fijian and Pacific island police, he says plans are already underway to detect and prevent such corruption.

“The commissioner of police has given a directive my drug intelligence unit to formulate and develop a unit… to prevent it [police] from being infiltrated by these drug dealers,” says Assistant Superintendent Masitabua.

According to Pacific security specialist Jose Sousa-Santos, the potential for ingrained, drug syndicate led corruption on Australia’s doorstep should be taken very seriously.

“The worst case scenario, we are looking at the Pacific becoming a semi-narco region. That is not just a real threat to the Pacific but it's also a real threat to Australia and New Zealand."

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Dateline is an award-winning Australian, international documentary series airing for over 40 years. Each week Dateline scours the globe to bring you a world of daring stories. Read more about Dateline
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Dateline is an award-winning Australian, international documentary series airing for over 40 years. Each week Dateline scours the globe to bring you a world of daring stories.
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3 min read
Published 10 March 2020 8:19am
Updated 10 March 2020 9:34am
By Evan Williams, Will Reid

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