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A tour bus from Paraguay was busted with 300 kilos of cocaine on its way to the Olympics

Paraguay drug bust cocaine Olympics Rio Brazil
Cocaine seized by officials in Paraguay is displayed in front of the bus in which it was discovered. Paraguay National Antidrug Secretariat

Officials in Paraguay intercepted a tour bus loaded with 296 kilos of cocaine on its way to the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro on August 14.

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The bus, empty except for two men and the cocaine, was stopped on the Paraguay side of the Friendship Bridge, which connects Ciudad del Este, Paraguay, with Foz do Iguaçu, Brazil, according to a report from Paraguayan news site ABC and first spotted by InSight Crime.

Paraguayan authorities were tipped off that something was amiss with the bus — which still had the logos of a transport company — when they noticed that it had no passengers.

Authorities charged two men, a 52-year-old and 46-year-old, with drug trafficking and other crimes. The cocaine, in 274 packets, was hidden in a meter-long, 20-centimeter-wide false bottom underneath a mini fridge. The bus was sold by VIPS Tours SA in late July, with the buyer promising to remove the logos.

Upon examining the seized cocaine, officials determined that its likely origin was Colombia, the world's largest producer of the drug. They said that it would have had a value of $3 million on the Brazil market, according to ABC. Authorities also seized cellphones and cash.

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'Uncontainable avalanche'

The region around Ciudad del Este, where Brazil and Argentina border Paraguay, has emerged as a hub for smuggling drugs and other illicit goods, particularly with the run-up to the Olympics this month.

Friendship Bridge Argentina Brazil Paraguay
Friendship Bridge connects Paraguay and Brazil. Google Maps

Authorities determined that the cocaine seized on August 14 was headed for Rio, where other high-profile drug seizures have occurred and where increased violence in the city prompted state and federal officials to deploy tens of thousands of armed soldiers and police.

While this cocaine shipment would have stayed in Brazil, South America's largest country has become a key transshipment point for the drug. This is not only because its porous borders and location make it a good jumping-off point for cocaine from Colombia, Bolivia, and Peru that's bound for markets in Africa, Asia, and Europe, but also because Brazil itself is the world's second-largest consumer of cocaine behind the US.

Paraguay, through which the cocaine shipment was passing, is also a major producer of marijuana. And its location and widespread corruption among officials there has helped generate an "uncontainable avalanche" of contraband, a senior official in the country said in late 2014.

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This post has been updated to correct the location of the tri-border region.

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