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Guinea-Bissau called 'narco-state'

BISSAU, Guinea-Bissau, Nov. 2 (UPI) -- A flurry of drug trafficking since the ouster of the Guinea-Bissau president in April has some officials suspecting the sudden removal was a cocaine coup.

The military, long associated with drug trafficking, took control of the government April 12, and since then sources said more twin-engine planes than ever have been arriving from Latin America, The New York Times reported Friday.

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The sources said the planes land in remote fields, uninhabited islands and estuaries in the country and unload cargoes of cocaine for shipment north.

To make the 1,600-mile trip across the Atlantic worthwhile, the planes would need to carry at least 1.5 tons in cargo, officials said.

A senior Drug Enforcement Administration official in the United States, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the coup now means illegal drugs are sanctioned at the top of Guinea-Bissau's government.

"They are probably the worst narco-state that's out there on the continent," he said. "They are a major problem."

"In other African countries government officials are part of the problem. In Guinea-Bissau, it is the government itself that is the problem," he said.

Gen. Antonio Injal, the army chief of staff, denied he is a drug trafficker.

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"We ask the international community to give us the means to fight drugs," he said.

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