Pubdate: Sun, 07 Dec 2008 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2008 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/info/letters/index.html Website: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Robert Marshall Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) COCAINE DEALER NOT ENTITLED TO SYMPATHY Winnipegger Kevin Hiebert went on the lam a month ago from the confines of a dreary Greek prison after serving several years of his life sentence for cocaine trafficking. On Wednesday, reports said he planned to turn himself in, but only if his return to Canada was guaranteed. When Hiebert's newly found "freedom" was initially reported there were those who applauded his moxie while others condemned the federal government -- both the law-and-order Conservatives and the more relaxed Liberals -- for sitting on their hands, not having done anything to extricate this Canadian from his Greek circumstance. There were also a few conspiracy theorists. They wove accusations of corruption pointing to alleged demands for cash from Greek officials that went unpaid, accounting for the former West Kildonan resident's jam. His prison stay is long by Canadian standards, but is more likely about the social implications of his crime than conspiracy. Hiebert was a mule, a trafficker, a smuggler of two kilos' worth of South American cocaine. Cocaine means fast money that destroys families (Hiebert's has disintegrated since his capture) and neighbourhoods. It is a major contributing factor to global social disorder characterized by kidnappings, beatings, amputations and murders. There is not enough room on this page to list Winnipeg people who have suffered from cocaine-based torment and grief. But this isn't about Winnipeg. It's about Greece and it has all the expected problems with cocaine and more. Recent research sponsored by England's University of Bath and the Leuven Institute for Criminology in Belgium says that evidence gathered since the early 1990s has confirmed Greece as a major entry point for cocaine en route to the European Union. That cocaine originates with South American cartels whose success depends on viciousness. The New York Times has reported that cocaine originating in Columbia is responsible for "by far the biggest humanitarian catastrophe of the Western Hemisphere." The ongoing distress has meant the displacement of two million people and too many killings to count with some indigenous tribes facing extinction. According to Jan Egeland, the former United Nations Undersecretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, the cocaine industry has left Columbia's displaced children without hope and ripe for the picking by guerrilla groups, paramilitary forces and drug gangs. The lucrative drug trade has lured multinational crime groups into Greece while west-African nations have become transit hubs for cocaine en route to the Mediterranean paradise for later distribution. Hiebert was arrested in 1999 at a time when the Athens News Agency reported that the "Greek police narcotics squad has repeatedly dealt with Nigerian drug trafficking rings that smuggle large quantities of heroin and (South American) cocaine into the country..." At the same time, the RCMP said Hiebert and his associates, arrested in Amsterdam, were likely parts of an international smuggling gang "recruited on behalf of a Nigerian drug-trafficking ring operating out of Greece." Some claim that Hiebert's arrest marked his debut into the criminal world. Maybe, but it was into a world of international gangsters and a multibillion-dollar industry. Jumping into that kind of maelstrom comes with a heavy in-for-a-penny-in-for-a-pound price. The snake's head is impotent without players like Hiebert, and given the unique Greek situation and the crime's international scope it is clear that his iron-fisted sentence was based on deterrence and denunciation. It wasn't pot for personal use. He was a foreigner trying to profit quickly in an illicit business linked to organized crime and terror that leaves stains of greed and wickedness wherever it travels. As for Hiebert's repatriation demands, our government is not on call to fish every Canadian out of the tough jail conditions of foreign lands. Glossy federal pamphlets are published for those considering crime abroad that warn of dire consequences if caught and state that the government "cannot interfere in the judicial affairs of another country." There is a prisoner transfer treaty with Greece but it's not guaranteed and can only be activated if both governments agree to it. Canadian justice is not known for considering the social consequence of crime. Its reputation is more about forgiveness and generosity. While that culture of largesse may have influenced Hiebert's supporters, it doesn't negate the fact that legitimate justice can mean different things in different parts of the world. When he's caught, nobody should expect Greek authorities to rush to the typically Canadian perspective. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin