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Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Police find massive drug-smuggling tunnel in Spain, complete with underground rail system and cranes

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Spanish police have uncovered a sprawling drug-smuggling tunnel, complete with a rail system and underground cranes to smuggle hashish from Morocco into Spain.

Police said in a news release on Tuesday that the structure was hidden beneath a warehouse and extended over three levels, including a descent shaft and a chamber for drug storage. Police said the group operating the tunnel had installed pumping and soundproofing systems that “kept the infrastructure operational without arousing suspicion.”

Authorities seized 17 metric tons of the drug, $1.6 million in cash, and arrested 27 people in connection with the operation. 

Police said two people headed the network. One, based in Morocco, was arrested on Thursday night and is considered the “narco-architect” and “mastermind of the tunnels,” police said, while the other person, based in Ceuta, owned all the seized drugs.

Authorities released video of the bust, showing officers raiding the tunnel and seizing evidence.

Spanish police discovered a drug-smuggling tunnel in the North African exclave of Ceuta, authorities said on Tuesday, March 31, 2026.

Spanish National Police


Hashish is usually trafficked into Spain by sea. In 2023, Spain accounted for 68% of all resin seizures in the EU, Ruters reported, citing the latest data from the EU drugs agency.

In January, Spanish police said they busted a network that saw smugglers swim on the high seas to help stash Colombian cocaine on Europe-bound container ships and hijack vessels. That bust was revealed just three days after Spain announced its largest-ever seizure of cocaine at sea.

Last year, police forces dismantled a drug trafficking ring that used what authorities called high-speed “narco boats” to smuggle large quantities of cocaine from Brazil and Colombia to the Canary Islands. The ring allegedly used an abandoned shipwreck as a refueling platform for the speedboats.

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