Pubdate: Fri, 09 Mar 2001 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 2001 Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/areas/Caribbean CARIBBEAN HAMPERED ON DRUG FLOW SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) -- Caribbean authorities said Friday they are hampered by limited resources as they try to stem the drug flow that accounts for an estimated one-third of U.S.-bound cocaine shipments. Jamaica, the Bahamas, the Dominican Republic and Haiti were named as major transshipment centers in a U.S. State Department report released last week. Eastern islands -- including St. Kitts and St. Lucia -- were increasingly being used by traffickers, the report said. "We have tried hard to stop cocaine from entering or leaving," Jamaica National Police spokesman Sgt. Jubert Llewellyn said. "Frankly, intelligence is where we have been hurt by a lack of resources. We want to take out the drug trafficking heads, and that takes money." While the flow of cocaine through Haiti has decreased, Jamaica has become the region's leading transshipment point, the report said. It estimated 79 tons of cocaine moved through Jamaica in 2000, compared to 34 tons in 1999. Haiti was the only Caribbean country that was not certified as fully cooperating with U.S. anti-drug efforts, but economic penalties were waived to allow the new government an opportunity to revive the country's shattered economy and crack down on the drug trade. "We are determined to earn the certification next year by reinforcing cooperation with the United States," Haitian Minister of Justice Gary Lissade said Friday. He said the new government of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide also planned to increase surveillance. Until corruption and a weak, underfunded police force are addressed by the government, "Haiti's and the international community's efforts to fight illegal drugs there will be destined to be ineffective," the U.S. government report said. The report also named the U.S. territory of Puerto Rico as the entry point into the United States for much of the Colombian cocaine moved around the Caribbean, mostly in speed boats or in commercial shipping containers. "We are working to dismantle several drug trafficking organizations that use Puerto Rico as a transshipment point," said Waldo Santiago, U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration spokesman. "It is used because shipments from here to the U.S. don't undergo any customs checks." Because of Puerto Rico's importance as a transit point for cocaine destined for mainland cities, the U.S. Navy has joined the U.S. Coast guard in anti-drug patrols around the island, deploying surveillance aircraft and patrol ships to thwart traffickers. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake