home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- o+░ H= ╚NATION, Page 18WAR ON DRUGSThe Flow Goes On
-
-
-
- On a routine coastal patrol last week, Panamanian police
- noticed two dozen shrimp boats clustered near the island of
- Cebaco, on the Pacific coast. Suspicious, officers boarded one
- of the craft and discovered two packages containing 15 kg of
- cocaine. For Nestor Castillo, police chief of Veraguas province,
- it was a distressingly familiar episode. "In the past year we
- are getting flooded with cocaine processed in Colombia," he
- says. "More than ever before."
-
- Panama, with 1,550 miles of scalloped Atlantic and Pacific
- coastline, remains a major transshipment point for cocaine
- moving from South America to the U.S. and Europe. A July report
- by Washington's General Accounting Office claims that even more
- drugs are moving through Panama today than before the American
- invasion of December 1989. That is worrisome for the Bush
- Administration, which had hoped the removal of General Noriega
- would curtail drug smuggling through Panama.
-
- Noriega's arrest did disrupt the Panamanian operations of
- Colombia's Medellin cartel, which allegedly paid the general
- millions of dollars for passage through the isthmus. But the
- unexpected result, U.S. experts say, is that the rival Cali
- cartel established a base in Panama and has since inundated the
- country -- along with Mexico, Guatemala and the Caribbean --
- with vast quantities of cocaine destined for the U.S. and
- Europe.
-
- Panamanian President Guillermo Endara's nascent antidrug
- force is starting to score some seizures, thanks to an infusion
- of U.S. aid, but it remains badly outmanned and out gunned by
- the narco-traficantes. Says a senior official of the U.S. Drug
- Enforcement Administration: "The Endara government has had to
- create a viable antinarcotic unit from nothing. In our view it
- has done an excellent job."
-
-
-
-
-
-
-