New US strike on alleged drug boat kills four in Caribbean: media

New US strike on alleged drug boat kills four in Caribbean: media
This March 17, 2013 handout image provided by the Santa Barbara Sheriff's Office in California shows an apparently abandoned 30 foot “Panga” style boat that washed up on Arroyo Camada Beach near Refugio State Beach. (FILE/AFP)
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New US strike on alleged drug boat kills four in Caribbean: media

New US strike on alleged drug boat kills four in Caribbean: media
  • This week's reported strike took the toll to 80 deaths in 20 strikes in international waters

WASHINGTON: US forces have struck another alleged drug trafficking boat in the Caribbean, upping the death toll in the contentious anti-narcotics campaign to 80, US media reports said Thursday.
Washington began carrying out such strikes -- which experts say amount to extrajudicial killings even if they target known traffickers -- in early September, taking aim at vessels in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific.
This week's reported strike took the toll to 80 deaths in 20 strikes in international waters.
The timing of the strike was not clear, with broadcaster CBS reporting the boat was destroyed on Monday and the New York Times reporting the strike took place on Wednesday, both citing an unnamed Pentagon official.
The Pentagon did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
The UN Human Rights Chief, Volker Turk, this month urged Washington to investigate the strikes' legality, saying there was "strong evidence" they constitute "extrajudicial" killings.
The US Justice Department said the strikes are consistent with the law of armed conflict and the government has signaled it will continue operations.
A US aircraft carrier arrived off the coast of Latin America on Tuesday, marking a significant increase in Washington's military presence in the region and escalating tensions with Venezuela, which announced a "massive" retaliatory deployment.
Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth announced on Thursday a new phase of the mission to "remove narco-terrorists", which he called "Operation Southern Spear."
The post gave no details of what the operation would entail or how it might differ from military actions already being undertaken.


US sanctions Myanmar armed group over scams

Updated 1 sec ago

US sanctions Myanmar armed group over scams

US sanctions Myanmar armed group over scams
WASHINGTON: The United States announced Wednesday that it was imposing sanctions on an armed Myanmar group — alongside four of its senior leaders — accusing them of supporting cyber scam centers that target Americans.
The action took aim at the Democratic Karen Benevolent Army (DKBA), alongside companies Trans Asia and Troth Star, for their alleged roles in helping to develop these scam centers, the US Treasury Department said.
“The revenue generated by scam center workers — who are often themselves victims of human trafficking — supports organized crime and allows the DKBA to finance its harmful activities,” the Treasury added.
John Hurley, the department’s undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, said that criminal networks operating out of Myanmar “are stealing billions of dollars from hardworking Americans through online scams.”
“These same networks traffic human beings and help fuel Burma’s brutal civil war,” he said in a statement, warning that the US government would continue pursuing cybercriminals.
The two firms targeted, alongside Thai national Chamu Sawang, are also linked to Chinese organized crime, the Treasury said.
The agency’s move adds to earlier actions against “illicit actors perpetrating these scams.”
In May, it designated the Karen National Army as a transnational criminal organization, alongside its leader and his two sons for their “roles in facilitating human trafficking and cyber scams that harm US citizens.”
In October, the Treasury — with UK counterparts — sanctioned a Cambodian business conglomerate called the Prince Group that operates scam centers, it added.
A US government estimate noted that Americans lost at least $10 billion in 2024 to Southeast Asia-based scam operations. This marked a 66-percent rise over the prior year.