Pubdate: Tue, 26 Jun 2001 Source: Reuters (Wire) Copyright: 2001 Reuters Limited Author: Paulo Whitaker WORLD'S BIGGEST DOPE STASH GOES UP IN SMOKE CUBATAO, Brazil, June 26 (Reuters) - Brazil on Tuesday incinerated what it claims is the biggest batch of dope ever torched, vying for a place in the Guinness Book of Records and highlighting its drug fight on its national anti-drug day. Guarded by 300 police agents in 25 vehicles and helicopters buzzing overhead, a convoy of seven trucks carried the stash 652 miles (1050 kilometers) from Brazil's southwestern state of Mato Grosso do Sul to Sao Paulo state for destruction. A string of boxes containing sealed packages of 140 tons of seized marijuana, cocaine and hashish were winched above a furnace raging at about 1500 degrees Celsius (2732 Fahrenheit) and dropped inside, federal police said. "The drugs that are being burned here today will not reach their perverse end of degrading our youth and encouraging crime," Justice Minister Jose Gregori said at the ceremonial burning, watched by scores of TV cameras and reporters. Alongside, a federal police band played the theme song to U.S. TV cop series "S.W.A.T." as the parcels of white powder, cannabis flowers and resin met their fiery end. The scent of marijuana filled the air above the industrial town of Cubatao as 120 tons of cannabis went up in smoke. Brazil timed the high-profile incineration to coincide with its National Anti-Drugs Day, drawing the spotlight to its battle against the scourge of drug trafficking and consumption. Police in other cities also burned drug hauls, albeit on a much smaller scale. Authorities are now hoping the ceremony will earn Brazil a place in the Guinness Book of Records for the biggest batch of drugs ever destroyed. Federal police chose Cubatao for the burning since only its vast steel plant had the capacity to accommodate the hefty drug haul, seized over the past 12 months. The incineration was expected to take 15 hours, police said. Cubatao was a fitting site for the display. Its skyline of tall smoke-belching chimneys has prompted many visitors to liken the city to something out of a science-fiction movie. Police had planned to play to the cameras and drop the drug parcels off a conveyor belt into a mobile furnace but they moved the burning to a stationary furnace after the drugs repeatedly fell off the conveyor belt. - --- MAP posted-by: GD