Ocnus.Net
Drug-Trafficking in Guinea
By IRIN 10/10/08
Oct 11, 2008 - 8:32:17 AM
Guinea has become a major drug-trafficking hub and the trade there is
now potentially more dangerous than in Guinea-Bissau, according to
Antonio Mazzitelli, regional representative of the UN Office on Drugs
and Crime.
"The [drug trafficking] situation is more complex and more dangerous
now than in Guinea-Bissau based on the information we have," Mazzitelli
told IRIN.
International drug traffickers from Colombia, Venezuela, Nigeria and
Spain, among other countries, have moved their trade up the coast from
Guinea-Bissau to Guinea after being driven out of Bissau because of
increased government scrutiny, according to an official from the
government's anti-narcotics bureau (OCAD) in the capital Conakry.
Though the amount of drugs trafficked through Guinea is unclear, OCAD's
new head, Sakho Moussa Camara told IRIN over 1,000kg were seized in
Guinea in
2007. He said the office has seized 7,499kg of drugs between 19 August
and
15 September 2008.
Mazzittelli said it is difficult to specify the amount of drugs in
transit or that are seized, and would confirm only that the UNODC knew
of several drugs seizures in Guinea of approximately 150kg each in
2008.
Mazzitelli warned that the drugs trade could destabilise Guinea, which
is prone to volatility and has been characterised by weak governance.
"Drugs could be a trigger for further instability and could facilitate
anarchy and individual abuses of whoever is in power, making any
solution to potential political crisis difficult," he said.
Trafficking and related corruption hamper development by building up a
get-rich-quick culture which quashes private initiatives aimed at
building up sustainable investment, says Mazzittelli. Instead "it
generates additional sources of revenue for a few people without
creating any real wealth or jobs for the rest, which can hijack
development in the country," Mazzittelli warned.
He added that drug trafficking fuels crime and engenders corruption at
all levels of the administration. "[The trade] can contribute to
tensions between different groups who will fight each other to get a
larger share of the pie."
Rising tension between the police and army spilled over into open
conflict in the capital, Conakry, in June 2008.
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=78784
Another official at OCAD who asked not to be named, said corruption at
the highest levels of the military and police and a lack of personnel
and equipment are impeding OCAD's ability to crack down on drug
trafficking.
Corruption
A senior official in the Guinean Ministry of Security who also asked to
remain anonymous, said because of corruption traffickers are often
released hours after their arrest and many drug caches disappear.
The official said this occurred in the case of Venezuelan and Colombian
drug traffickers in May 2008, after they were arrested for storing
large quantities of cocaine in Kipé, a Conakry suburb.
OCAD's Camara told IRIN,"I fight not only against drug traffickers, but
also against some members of the Guinean police and military who are
enriching themselves through drug trafficking." He continued, "You
cannot imagine how deeply some drug barons are entrenched [here], in
full view of law enforcers, and.protected by some senior officials."
He said people involved in the drug industry have offered him large
sums of money to stop his work. He added that OCAD has a list of 25
members of the military possibly implicated in drug trafficking.
Camara was appointed head of OCAD in August, one month after his
predecessor stepped down in unclear circumstances.
Police and military officials told IRIN that a handful of people in
their ranks who engage in illicit activities give the entire
institutions a bad name.
"Not all police are mixed up in this drug-trafficking," Conde Mansa
Mady, a head of the judicial section of the Kaloum police station in
Guinea, said. "Here at our police station once we arrest a
narco-trafficker the person is immediately sent to the central prison
of Conakry."
A military officer who asked to remain anonymous told IRIN: "Certain
among our military colleagues tarnish our name by trafficking drugs,"
He added, "We often go out with OCAD officials to provide reinforcement
for them in their work."
The routes
According to the unnamed OCAD official, drugs leave Colombia aboard a
small Cessna airplane flying at an altitude of 2,000 meters, making
them undetectable by radar. The planes land, often at night, in towns
like Faranah in central Guinea, 455km from Conakry, and from here they
are conveyed under heavy escort to the capital for storage, he said.
During August and September small Cessna aircraft landed "repeatedly"
in Faranah, and the town of Boke, 268km north of the capital,
transporting drugs, the official said.
Locals tipped off OCAD on 4 September when a small aircraft carrying
drugs landed in Boke during the night. The move led to the arrest of
the governor, the mayor, a military commander, central commissioner,
and the air traffic controller, according the Security Ministry
official. All are currently being held in Conakry for questioning.
Smugglers generally transport the drugs across the region by truck or
to Europe or the United States by boat, hidden in crates of cargo such
as fish or soap cartons.
Individual drug couriers or 'mules' are carrying increasing amount of
the trade, according to the UNODC's Mazzitelli. They swallow capsules
of drugs or hide drugs on their person. Guinea is one of four
countries, along with Mali, Nigeria and Senegal, in which drug mules
play a central role in trafficking, according to a yet-to-be-released
UN study.
Mazzitelli said couriers departing by plane from Mali were in many
cases supplied with cocaine from Guinea. In 2006, 221 couriers who had
started their journeys in Guinea were arrested in Africa and Europe.
Government fight
OCAD's Camara, appointed in August 2008, said the anti-drug body has
made some progress.
OCAD has tried to ban small flights from landing and is working with
locals who tip them off when they hear of a plane arriving. Camara said
the office has helped drive about 100 drug traffickers out of the
country. This could not be independently verified.
But OCAD is limited by a lack of money, people and equipment, said
Camara. It has just one vehicle to monitor the entire country - nearly
246,000sqkm -- as its other two vehicles were damaged in the June 2008
stand-off between soldiers and the police, he said.
Camara said OCAD's office was looted to remove traces of military
involvement in drug trafficking. Others who ask not to be named say the
incident was linked to a seizure of 300kg of cocaine that OCAD had been
involved with a few weeks earlier.
"We are fighting against the phenomenon with bare hands against drug
traffickers who use very sophisticated weapons," said Camara. "We could
do much more if we had the support of the military and paramilitary
forces."
OCAD is now trying to go deeper to tap into drug smuggling networks, he
said, but these are hard to access.
One important step in the fight against trafficking, UNODC's Mazzitelli
said, is to work with banks to monitor unusual financial transactions
so they can stop money laundering activities in Guinea.
"If people's money is seized," said Mazzitelli, "they will be
powerless, and they will be exposed to the judgment of outsiders." But
he added that setting up such surveillance in Guinea will be a
challenge.
West African officials are set to discuss this and related issues at an
ECOWAS ministerial conference on drug trafficking, to be held 26
October in Cape Verde.
"We hope [at the conference] the Guinean authorities will seize the
opportunity to make a ruling denouncing the situation, and to appeal to
the international community for strong measures and support in the
fight," Mazzitelli told IRIN. "We hope they will adopt the same stance
as Guinea-Bissau did three years ago to try to break this cycle and
expose those who are involved."
Source: Ocnus.net 2008