Pubdate: Sat, 29 Sep 2007 Source: Guardian, The (UK) Copyright: 2007 Guardian Newspapers Limited Contact: http://www.guardian.co.uk/guardian/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/175 Author: James Mollison RISE AND FALL OF THE COCAINE KING Pablo Escobar was the world's most infamous drug lord, responsible for kidnappings, bombings and murder on an industrial scale. How did he get away with it for so long? I met "Popeye" - Pablo Escobar's head of security and one of the few survivors of the Medellin cartel - by chance when I visited Colombia's new state-of-the-art prison, Valledupar. I found him reading Homer's Iliad in the high-security wing. He was my introduction to the myth of Escobar, "cocaine king", sometime politician and wholesale murderer. According to those closest to him, Escobar was involved in storming Colombia's supreme court in 1985, killing half the country's top judges, blowing an airliner out of the sky, bombing the headquarters of Colombian intelligence, putting a bounty on the head of every policeman in the country and, ultimately, evading 13,000 raids during an unprecedented manhunt that lasted almost two years. I was in Colombia pursuing a photographic project on "Narcotecture" - buildings built with drugs money. Escobar's home in Medellin, a six-storey concrete bunker, was last on my list. The building is now the administrative HQ of Colombia's public prosecutors, and I was apprehended in the street outside as I took photos. I explained to the boss, Manuel Dario Aristizabal, what I was doing and he proudly informed me that the office we sat in used to be Pablo's bedroom. He had a bag of Escobar photographs - would I like to see them? The photographs showed items and scenes discovered at Pablo's private Medellin prison. There were guns and sex toys, and also more homely pictures of Pablo playing with his family. There seemed some discrepancy between the gangster myth - "the most dangerous criminal the world has ever seen" - and the reality. I decided to investigate further, to talk to people who had known him - and to unearth more photographs. Dona Hermilda, Pablo's mother, then 88, told us of the charming gentleman son she had raised. Pablo's cousin, Jaime Gaviria, and his old schoolmate, "El Chino", told us of the early days of the cocaine trade. It was important to understand, they said, that people's attitudes had fundamentally changed towards cocaine. When Pablo was first getting his business organised, people in Colombia believed cocaine would soon be legalised. A "white gold" rush was on in preparation for a legal business. "The first time I saw him... he was like a god," Popeye recalled. Escobar challenged the state, declared war on the elites that had ruled Colombia for decades and even dared aspire to be president. Pablo was born in 1949. At school, he told Gaviria, "I might be poor, but I am not going to die poor." He began in the cocaine business smuggling small quantities of coca paste from Peru to Colombia. He was arrested in 1976, but avoided prosecution after the two secret police officers responsible for his arrest were murdered. Gaviria said, "Pablo always said that it was the young gringos from the peace corps who started the cocaine bonanza. They began to invade this country, sent by the government up there, saying they had come in search of peace, but they ended up in search of cocaine." The popularity of cocaine in the clubs of Miami and New York in the late 70s and early 80s propelled Escobar from a backstreet crime boss to one of the richest and most powerful men in the world. He came to public attention in the early 80s, during his campaign for election to Colombia's congress. His most zealous critic was Rodrigo Lara Bonilla, the justice minister, who favoured extradition to the US (where drug traffickers found the justice system less responsive to their bribes and threats). Escobar had Lara Bonilla assassinated, I was told. From 1985 to 1988 the battle focused on intimidating the judiciary into ruling extradition unconstitutional. A tidal wave of violence was unleashed, claiming the lives of 1,000 police officers. For every dead officer, 10 gang members or innocent civilians were killed, many by police death squads. Eventually, Escobar surrendered to the Colombian justice system, but only after forcing the government to accept his terms - including immunity from extradition and a purpose-built prison. His personal prison, La Catedral, was located at the end of a long and windy dirt track where it could be defended from attack by Escobar's enemies. Guards were bribed to ensure the free movement of visitors. It was a wonderful time for everyone, according to his sister, Luz Maria. "We had lovely family gatherings at La Catedral." It was only when he heard he was to be moved to another prison that Escobar escaped. He was on the run again, pursued by an elite Colombian police unit and enemies in the Colombian underworld. In the end, it was his fondness for his family that led to his downfall. He was shot dead after police traced him to his hide-out as he talked with his son. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek