Pubdate: Mon, 12 Jun 2000 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 2000 Associated Press Author: The Associated Press DRUG TRAFFICKERS THREATEN STABILITY PORT-OF-SPAIN, Trinidad (AP) -- Drug traffickers are endangering democracy in small nations and leaving a trail of violence across the Americas, speakers told a major anti-drug conference Monday attended by Attorney General Janet Reno. ``If the international community does not work together against drug traffickers, this region's stability and the economic stability of the world are at grave risk,'' Trinidad's Attorney General Ramesh Maharaj said. Maharaj noted U.N. estimates that show the illegal drug trade generating $500 billion a year -- more than the world's oil and gas industries combined. The two-day conference in Trinidad's capital, aimed at overcoming international obstacles to law enforcement, brought more than 100 law enforcement officials from the Caribbean, Britain, Canada and the United States. Just off the coast South America's cocaine-producing countries, Trinidad was the first country to sign a much-criticized agreement allowing U.S. law enforcers to pursue suspected drug smugglers into its territorial waters. Though some Caribbean countries complained that such agreements could undermine their sovereignty, all have since signed up. Reno, who led the U.S. delegation, was expected to visit a rural drug rehabilitation center on the seized estate of drug lord Dole Chadee. Last year Chadee was hanged along with eight of his henchmen for killing a family in a drug dispute. Caribbean countries are under pressure to loosen secretive banking laws, which U.S. and European drug agents have said attract the fortunes of drug barons. In addition, the United States is frustrated by other countries' reluctance in extraditing some drug suspects. And smaller countries are exasperated by the flood of convicted criminals deported from U.S. prisons. The difficulty of balancing anti-drug operations and international relations was underscored last week, when U.S. drug agents lured a suspected trafficker out of St. Kitts on a boat in order to arrest him in international waters. ``Smugglers don't pay attention to international borders, but law enforcement has to, not only in tracking them down, but also in taking action against them,'' said Jay Carmichael, chief counsel for the U.S. Coast Guard. Officials at the two-day meeting were scheduled to discuss money laundering, street gangs, how to fight organized crime and extradition. They were also to consider proposals for specialized ``drug courts'' to speed trials. - --- MAP posted-by: greg