Pubdate: Tue, 08 May 2007 Source: International Herald-Tribune (International) Copyright: 2007 The Associated Press Contact: http://www.iht.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/212 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Venezuela Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/walters.htm (Walters, John) US DRUGS CZAR URGES EUROPEANS TO USE INFLUENCE WITH VENEZUELA TO HELP REDUCE COCAINE FLOWS BRUSSELS, Belgium: U.S. anti-drug czar John Walters urged European nations Tuesday to use their influence with Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez to help curb what he called an increasing flow of cocaine through the country's air and sea ports. Walters told reporters during talks at European Union headquarters there were growing reports of cocaine smuggling along routes through Venezuela. "I know some European nations have more extensive cooperation with the Venezuelan government and we hope that we can use that to try to cut some of these off," Walters said. Chavez has accused the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency of spying and suspended cooperation with the agency in 2005. On Monday, Venezuela's Justice Minister Pedro Carreno said the South American country would not allow U.S. agents to carry out counter-drug operations in the country and accused the agency of aiding narcotics traffickers. "What we have seen, however, is movement by air, and there have been press reports of this, coming out of Venezuela using known air fields, not clandestine air fields, moving into the Caribbean area, most heavily into Hispaniola," he said, referring to the island shared by Haiti and the Dominican Republic. "Also movements by sea which, with some increased regularity, look like they are also coming out of Venezuelan seaports." Walters said drugs smugglers were developing the "ability to have relatively safe staging areas" in Venezuela and warned that falling consumption in the United States and higher prices in Europe were encouraging traffickers to export across the Atlantic. Washington has repeatedly accused Venezuela of not cooperating in counter-drug efforts and says cocaine shipments are increasingly passing through the country from neighboring Colombia. Walters also urged Europeans to boost support for Colombia's Alvaro Uribe who is Washington's closed ally in Latin America, but is viewed with unease by some in Europe because of claims his political camp is too cozy with brutal far-right militias. Walters complained that Uribe has not been "aggressively supported" by Europe, despite successes in fighting the drugs problem and tackling violence. "He deserves support," Walters insisted. "I don't know of another nation in the world over the last five years that's had the improvement in human rights, in the protection of its citizens, that Columbia has." Despite those successes, Walters warned that Colombian drugs cartels were increasingly viewing Europe as a prime market and were bypassing trans-Atlantic interdiction efforts by using new routes via Mexico and Africa to ship their cocaine. "Five or 10 years ago we didn't see aircraft or ships coming into Africa to move cocaine into Europe," Walters said, adding that the United States was working with some European nations to halt that trade. "We are trying to get more help in the maritime arena." Walters' talks with the Europeans were also focused on Afghanistan, which supplies over 90 percent of the world's opium -- the raw material for heroin -- despite the presence of 36,000 NATO troops in the country. He said internationally backed efforts by the Afghan government to eradicate opium production in many of more stable northern provinces, but overall poppy cultivation continues to rise due to increases in the volatile south. The problems have been compounded, he said, by an increasing tendency by traffickers to process the opium into heroin in the country. Although British and other NATO troops have had some success in disrupting those operations, Walters said highly mobile, low-tech labs used by the drugs gangs were difficult to find and destroy. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake