Pubdate: Mon, 13 Mar 2006 Source: Stabroek News (Guyana) Copyright: 2006 Stabroek News Contact: http://www.stabroeknews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4034 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) BOYCOTTING THE DRUG LORDS No recent statement by a minister has provoked as much public consternation as the one by Home Affairs Minister Gail Teixeira in which she called for members of the public to boycott the businesses of drug lords as a means of helping to defeat them. Ms Teixeira has since issued a statement in an effort to clarify what she had said during the interview. "I did say 'boycott their business', don't associate with them. I did not speak of their shops, when I spoke of their business. Nor did I name any person. I made a comment about the business of drug lords, which is diverse", she said. It is unclear how the business of the drug lords could be boycotted if their shops aren't and an attempt at any distinction is superfluous. Ms Teixeira should have left it alone. It was a bold call for the businesses of the drug lords to be boycotted and she should be complimented on it. In her statement, Ms Teixeira also lamented that the media had not captured the fullness of her government's efforts to interdict the drug trade such as the establishment by the PPP/C of the Customs Anti-Narcotics Unit (CANU), the increasing annual budgetary allocation to support counter-narcotics, bilateral and multilateral cooperation agreements and the invitation to the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to establish an outpost in Guyana. Ms Teixeira also pointed out that it may be known to many who the drug lords are but until sufficient evidence can be gathered to take them to court "then they are in our midst". What must have really galled the ordinary man on reading Ms Teixeira's boycott comment in our edition was the perception that the burden of dealing with the drug lords was falling on the citizenry while the administration wrung its hands and pleaded that it was doing as much as it could. Moreover, how would the ordinary man know whom to withdraw his custom from or whom to walk away from at a social function when there was none of the evidence that Ms Teixeira says would be necessary to prosecute the drug lords. One assumes that if the ordinary man can find out about the illicit dealings of drug dealers and is asked to take a moral position on this then the government should be able to do far better and secure the prosecution of those embedded in the business. After all, the ordinary man doesn't have the leverage that the state has. He doesn't have the wealth of laws that can be brought to bear against the impugned. He doesn't have the wealth of law enforcement power to wit the police, CANU, GDF etc that can be used to snare these drug dealers. He doesn't have the capacity to mobilise an international network of anti-crime assistance. And this is where Ms Teixeira's statements rankle most. Notwithstanding her asseverations about the things her government has done or is doing, its record in relation to drug interdiction and the prosecution of drug lords is abysmally poor and there is no apparent concerted effort to change this, only lip service. In a most illuminating column in this week's Sunday Mirror, former President, Mrs Janet Jagan has written about the seizure of more than 3,000 kgs of cocaine aboard a vessel in Port Georgetown while she was President. After an exhaustive search and not finding anything the authorities were on the verge of giving up when Mrs Jagan and others urged them to continue. Equipment to cut into the boat was employed and the cocaine was found behind thick metal protection. She also referred to another case involving a fish farmer/drug baron who had ensconced himself in an East Bank mansion and who, after it became clear what he was involved in, was dispatched to Holland where a warrant was out for his arrest. Unfortunately, the US authorities allowed him off the plane in New York. As an aside, this same gentleman had been photographed in the company of senior government officials and had obviously been granted licences and concessions by a ministry without any careful check of his bon! a fides. Mrs Jagan said in the ship case there had been close collaboration with the US. It also seems that well-gathered intelligence played a part in these cases. Since the case referred to by Mrs Jagan in Port Georgetown, the governments that have followed and particularly the one that commenced in 2001 under President Jagdeo have failed signally to have any impact on the drug trade. This, despite the loads and loads of cocaine seized abroad after being shipped from Guyana in a variety of now famous containers: timber, rice, coconuts, molasses, fish etc. That result sends one of two messages: this government is not intent on interdicting the trade or it and its security apparatus are woefully incapable of undertaking the task. The administration has also appeared ambivalent about the legislative tools to attack the trade and more specifically money laundering. The history of the money laundering legislation is a very sad one and raises serious questions about this government's commitment. The legislation was first introduced in Parliament in October 1998 and signed into law in February 2000. To this day, more than six years later it has still not been properly activated and there has not been a single prosecution under this Act though even the most uninformed person knows that Georgetown has become a laundromat to the country's drug dealers. There is supposed to be a Financial Intelligence Unit in place but nothing has ever been heard publicly from it. All that is known for sure is that it has never been cited as the source of any case brought against anyone in connection with laundered proceeds. It is more the pity as the annual US report is one of the few sources of information on the extent of ! money laundering in this country and the dangerous impact it is having on society. So to hear Ms Teixeira speak now about her government's plan for asset forfeiture and wiretapping legislation to help in the fight against the drug lords isn't very reassuring. First, asset forfeiture legislation goes hand in glove with any respectable money laundering legislation. Why it would take six years from the date of the passage of the money laundering law for the asset forfeiture component is a conundrum worthy of a prize. Second, it is unclear how the government would go about seizing assets if it doesn't first build cases against drug lords and win prosecutions. It has none to its name and until it changes this it will be buffeted by the view that it is not serious about fighting drug trafficking. At the policy level the record is just as dismal. A previous plan to fight drugs gathered dust and various committees which were to be chaired by the President himself did not meet. A new plan unveiled with much fanfare last year after an interminable delay is still to be given life. And since she has laudably opened this Pandora's Box can Ms Teixeira say what efforts her government has been making to avoid the 'business' of the drug lords and to not associate with them? What are the Cabinet and the procurement administration doing to ensure that they don't transact business with drug dealers? What yardstick are they using particularly since the ordinary man in the street is expected to boycott the business of drug dealers and shun them? Can Ms Teixeira also say what she intends to do about businesses with links to drugs which have reportedly been given world cup-related contracts and a forestry deal? Whether it is thirst for the investment lucre of the drug lords or the lack of the will to fight them this government has failed comprehensively to tackle the trade and the tentacles of this corrosive business will reach far unless it is seriously confronted. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom