Pubdate: Sun, 23 Mar 2008
Source: East African Standard, The (Kenya)
Copyright: 2008 The East African Standard
Contact:  http://www.eastandard.net/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1743
Author: Athman Amran

NARCOTICS - A RAW NERVE THAT NO ONE DARES TOUCH

When investigating the multi-billion shilling narcotics  business in
Coast Province, one is met with  authorities' conspiracy of silence.

There is a lot of suspicion and fear as some people  warn that the
probe is a dangerous affair.

Kenya is an important transit route for Southwest Asian  hashish and
heroin dealers. Europe is the primary  market and North America the
secondary destination.

Eastern Africa representative of the UN Office on Drugs  and Crime, Mr
Carsten Hyttel, once remarked that South  American traffickers had
moved into Kenya.

This was after the tightening of law enforcement in  Spain, which was
once a main transit point for cocaine  headed to Europe.

When The Sunday Standard was investigating the  suspected routes and
methods used to smuggle hard drugs  into the country, the Coast
Provincial Criminal  Investigation Officer, Mr Bernard Mate, expressed
  suspicion and mistrust.

We were questioned about what we had learnt from our
investigations.

We met hostility at the Kenya Maritime Authority (KMA),  which
registers private speedboats.

A senior KMA officer, who declined to give his name,  threatened to
call the police after we inquired about  speedboats and their link in
drugs trafficking.

But another officer said the authority did not know how  many
speedboats were in the country.

"We are doing some baseline survey and after compiling  the data, we
will post it on our website," the officer  said.

Such records could help in tracing the owners of boats  involved in
illicit trade.

Private speedboats, some of them luxurious, dot almost  the entire
coastline -- from South Coast, the Mombasa  Island, Mtwapa, Kilifi,
Malindi all the way to Lamu.

Private speedboats face trade competition from private
jetties.

It is suspected that the porous small seaports -- from  Vanga on the
Kenya-Tanzania border in South Coast to  Lamu in the North-- are used
to not only smuggle hard  drugs but also some counterfeit goods and
guns.

Speedboats have been in this trade for a while.

Slain drug baron, Ibrahim Akasha, used a speedboat in  the trade. The
Government later confiscated the vessel.

A speedboat was also used in the Sh6.4 billion-drug  haul, part of
which was located at a Malindi villa in  December 14, 2004.

Some of the suspected entry points are Bodo, Kinondo --  where a major
drug consignment was discovered in 1997  -- Shimoni and Majoreni.

The Mombasa Old Port on Mombasa Island, Mtwapa Creek,  and areas
bordering some North Coast hotels, especially  where access to the
beach is difficult for fishermen  and police, are also entry points.

Others are in Kanamai area, Kikambala, Bofa, Tezo and  Kilifi beach,
Watamu, Malindi, Ngomeni, Mambrui and  along the beaches of some
islands in Lamu.

Entry points

The Sunday Standard visited some of the suspected entry  points and
talked to the locals, especially fishermen.

At Ngomeni, villagers say there are some days when  there is a flurry
of activity at night involving  speedboats and some huge sea vessels.

When there is such activity, some lorries are always on  standby while
the owners of the consignments arrive in  big expensive cars to ensure
everything goes on  smoothly.

When we visited one of the suspected notorious entry  points of
smuggled goods and drugs at daytime, it was  quiet and deserted. We
only found a few fishermen and  some young boys who were swimming.

"Some big ships usually anchor in the high seas. Small  boats are used
to reach them," a Ngomeni resident said.

But no one is sure what kind of activity goes on  between the owners
of the big vessels in the high seas  and the small speedboats.

Ordinary fishing boats are used in the smuggling  business sometimes,
it is alleged.

At such sea points, it is suspected that speedboats are  used to bring
in drugs for local use or those on  transit. Crafty drug barons also
use roads to bring in  narcotics.

According to a former drug dealer, who sought  anonymity, the road
from Likoni Ferry to the  Kenya-Tanzania border is frequently used to
transport  drugs from Dar-es-Salaam to Mombasa.

"The drugs are mostly from Pakistan and are offloaded  through
Dar-es-Salaam port or other routes," he says.

They mostly use matatus, although private  top-of-the-range cars,
which are rarely stopped and  checked on roadblocks, sometimes come in
handy.

When matatus are used, the former drug baron says, the  dealers
collude with some police officers.

A spy is usually sent to find out the officers manning  roadblocks,
just in case "unfriendly" officers happen  to be on the scene. The
person sent ahead usually  strikes deals with wayward officers and
ensures safe  passage of the vehicle carrying the drugs.

The traffickers use mobile phones to get in touch with  their contacts
at roadblocks or some police officers to  ensure safe passage of the
drugs.

"The mobile phone has helped a lot in the drug  trafficking business,"
he reveals.

The tricks

Drugs transported by road transport, especially  hashish, are usually
in small quantity, another former  drug trafficker says.

He adds: "The narcotics haul in high seas is usually in  large
quantities."

He alleges that large quantities of hard drugs still  find their way
into the country since there are few  anti-narcotics police in Mombasa.

The Government, he claims, is incapable of patrolling  the long
stretch of shore from Kwale to Lamu.

Also used to bring in the hard drugs, especially at  border points,
are bicycles and tuktuks (Three-wheeled  taxis).

There are many ways of carrying drugs when transported  by
road.

They can be carried in spare tyres, thermos flasks,  three-piece
suits, buibuis, shoes and even private  parts or through ingestion.

"Women are increasingly being used as couriers of hard  drugs. It is
not easy for them to be nabbed," the  former drug dealer says.

Drugs from Mombasa find their way to Lamu via the  Mokowe jetty, he
claims.

The drugs are placed in some boats, which head to  Matondoni point of
Lamu Island instead of Lamu jetty.

The drugs are then loaded onto donkeys and moved into  the island for
storage in a safe place. Such safe  places are distribution points to
youths through  special couriers (peddlers).

The Moi International Airport, in Mombasa, has also  been used as an
entry point for drugs despite tight  police checks.

According to the International Narcotics Board, some  traffickers use
small planes.

In Malindi and Lamu, where many youths are hooked to  heroin, the
former drug dealer cautions against  accepting free black or sweet
coffee.

"After about three cups of the coffee on three  consecutive days, a
person can easily get addicted and  become one of the customers of
some merciless drug  dealers," he warns.

Sources allege that some senior people in Government  work with local
and international drugs cartels.

Drug trafficking is big business.

Those in it, it is alleged, drive around in expensive
cars.

Like Akasha, they always have some "honest" businesses  that act as
fronts.

Envious lifestyle

The mansions they live in -- some right on the  beachfronts -- are
stupendous fortresses and their  lifestyle, a source of envy.

It is alleged that Akasha used to give some police  officers monthly
"hand outs".

When Akasha's drugs were impounded, it is said that  some senior
government officials had to make regular  trips abroad to meet the
Colombian owner for  negotiations.

Akasha, notorious drug dealer, confidently swaggered in  the town of
Mombasa and his private speedboat was  always openly and proudly displayed.

Had it not been for a deal gone sour between those  involved in the
hashish haul netted in 1999, the drug  consignment could never have
been discovered. The  consignment had already found its way to
Akasha's Nyali  house hideout.

Akasha was suspected to be close to some high-ranking  Government
officials and he may never have gotten into  trouble.

Some Coast residents want the Government to investigate  some tycoons
who have mansions along beachfronts and  who have built high walls to
block access to the beach.

Fierce dogs and harsh security guards man their  properties.

This is despite the beaches being public utilities.

residents suspect that some foreigners from Italy,  Switzerland and
other European countries could be using  their mansions and private
villas to hide drugs and  commit other illegal activities.
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MAP posted-by: Derek