
Cocaine in two excavators, gold in egg-shaped wax capsules
On June 6–7, South African Hawks found 90 kg of cocaine split between two excavators' engine compartments at Durban, shipped from Santos. In Mumbai, DRI's "Operation Golden Nexus" netted 3.2 kg of gold powder packed into seven egg-shaped wax capsules body-carried from Bangkok, with three airport ground staff arrested as the extraction ring. And in Paraguay's Triple Frontier, tirzepatide (Mounjaro) has become the new contraband of choice — PCC-linked couriers pay US$100 to smuggle ampoules across the Brazil border, exploiting an 80% price gap.

Two excavators arrived at the Port of Durban from Santos, Brazil. Customs officers flagged one; an inspection found 47 bricks of suspected cocaine tucked behind a panel leading into the engine compartment. While the team was still working that machine, a second report came in: the other excavator, already unloaded, had 43 more bricks in the same spot. Total: approximately 90 kg, with an estimated street value of R36 million (around US$2 million). 1
Cocaine in two excavators, Port of Durban — June 6, 2026
The vessel was the Neptune Ace Tokyo, docked at the Q and R automotive terminal. South Africa's Hawks (the Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation), their narcotics unit SANEB, customs officials, Durban's Visible Policing Operation, and the Local Criminal Record Centre all participated in the joint seizure. 1
No arrests have been made. The investigation is ongoing.
The concealment method is a practical application of an old logic: heavy industrial equipment moves in sealed shipping containers, is rarely fully disassembled at the port, and the engine compartment offers a cavity that's accessible with the right tools but not visible during a standard walk-around. The Brazil–South Africa shipping lane carries a steady volume of construction machinery. Spreading the load across two machines on the same vessel suggests the operation was designed for redundancy — if one unit is flagged, not everything is lost.

Gold wax capsules at Mumbai airport, body-carried — June 7, 2026
In Mumbai, India's Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) intercepted a gold handoff at a Fairmont hotel near Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport (CSMIA). Three transiting passengers — one Bangladeshi national and two Sri Lankan nationals — had flown in from Bangkok. They were body-carrying seven egg-shaped wax capsules, each packed with gold powder; total net weight approximately 3.2 kg of 24-karat gold, valued at roughly ₹5.01 crore (about US$600,000). 2 3
The operation, which DRI named "Operation Golden Nexus," dismantled not just the couriers but the extraction chain inside the airport. Three employees of AI Airport Services Limited — bus drivers Rohit Kumar Singh (31) and Ajit Acharekar (46), and vehicle monitor Santosh Pol (43) — were arrested for receiving the capsules from the transit passengers and ferrying them out. A local receiver was also arrested at the hotel. Seven people total. 3
The wax-capsule format has a specific utility: gold powder encased in wax is opaque on X-ray in a way that blends with body fat, and the egg shape is rounded enough to pass the same physical profile check that reveals rigid objects. Airport contractors with landside vehicle access can move the capsules off the secure perimeter without clearing another security checkpoint. This ring had all three elements working together: couriers who never left the transit zone, insiders who could receive and extract, and a buyer waiting outside. DRI says the operation assumes added significance given recent increases in India's gold import duties. 2

Weight-loss injections become the Triple Frontier's "new gold" — June 6, 2026
The item making inroads on the Paraguay–Brazil border is not cocaine, not cigarettes, not vapes. It is tirzepatide — the active ingredient in Mounjaro, a weekly weight-loss injection that has become one of the most in-demand pharmaceutical products in Brazil. A legitimate 15 mg dose retails at roughly R$3,500 (about US$700) in a Brazilian pharmacy. The same dose, manufactured without regulatory oversight in Ciudad del Este, Paraguay, sells for approximately R$430 (about US$83) — an 80-percent price gap that Brazilian criminal organizations, including PCC (Primeiro Comando da Capital, one of Brazil's largest criminal networks), have found impossible to ignore. 4
Brazil's Federal Highway Police (PRF) intercepted one documented shipment on highway BR-277: 2,210 ampoules hidden in a false compartment inside a luxury SUV, with a market value exceeding R$420,000 (about US$81,000). Smuggling couriers are reportedly paid R$500 (roughly US$100) per successful crossing — a fraction of what a similar drug-mule run would earn, but the criminal risk is substantially lower because pharmaceutical contraband carries lighter penalties than narcotics. 4

The health dimension is distinct from the legal one. Brazil's health regulator Anvisa notes that Paraguayan tirzepatide has no approved bioequivalence studies and is not legally a generic. The drug requires refrigeration; ampoules transported in a car's floor cavity under summer heat are potentially degraded or toxic by the time they reach a buyer in São Paulo. Ciudad del Este merchants are reportedly coaching Brazilian buyers on how to clear customs checks, and at least one security guard in the city was killed in a dispute over tirzepatide inventory. 4
An experimental successor compound, retatrutide — not yet approved anywhere in the world — is already being manufactured and sold via social media out of Paraguayan labs.
Cover image: Free Press Journal / DRI, via "DRI Busts Gold Smuggling Syndicate At Mumbai Airport Under Operation Golden Nexus"
References
- 1Multimillion rand drug bust at Durban Harbour
- 2DRI Busts Gold Smuggling Syndicate At Mumbai Airport Under 'Operation Golden Nexus'
- 3Mumbai airport smuggling case: Three staffers among seven arrested, gold worth Rs 5 crore seized
- 4Las bandas brasileñas pagan USD 100 por pasar tirzepatida desde CDE y el nuevo "oro" desplaza a los cigarrillos y las drogas
Add more perspectives or context around this Post.