Pubdate: Fri, 24 Jul 2009 Source: Red River Valley Echo, The (CN MB) Copyright: 2009 Altona Red River Valley Echo Contact: http://www.altonaecho.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4006 Author: Greg Vandermeulen JUSTICE CRITIC CALLS HIGHWAY A PORTAL FOR GUNS AND DRUGS News that Hwy. 75 funnels billions of dollars in international trade from Winnipeg to U.S. destinations is not something that would ordinarily cause alarm. Report causes concern But after a National Drug Intelligence Center report out of the U.S. suggested the highway was being used to funnel drugs and guns across the border, Manitoba's PC party has raised the alarm. PC Justice Critic Kelvin Goertzen referred to a recent sentencing of a Winnipeg man for smuggling guns into Canada in exchange for drugs, saying we shouldn't be surprised this kind of thing is happening. "For years we have said dangerous guns are coming into Manitoba in exchange for drugs that are grown and produced in Manitoba and for years the NDP government has dismissed the problem," he said. Goertzen added that things are going to get worse. "Guns and drugs are the currency in which gangs trade in and the value of that currency just keeps going up and up in our province," he said. Goertzen was referring to the American report called the "2009 Midwest High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area Drug Market Analysis." The report discusses the smuggling of high potency marijuana from Manitoba to the U.S., and speculates that illegal drugs in the Dakota's and Omaha markets may rise as drug production in Manitoba increases. The report assumes that the demand for drugs will rise in the Winnipeg area. "The Fargo/Grand Forks, Sioux City/Sioux Falls, and Omaha markets will be especially vulnerable to this increase, since I-29 connects with Canada's Manitoba Provincial Highway 75, which passes through Winnipeg," the report states. Not just a border issue Goertzen said the issue cannot simply be solved at the border and is urging the government to get involved and crack down on drugs being grown or manufactured in Manitoba. "There is a direct link between the increased presence of guns on the streets of Winnipeg and the manufacturing of drugs," he said. "If you want to reduce guns, you have to reduce the drug trade." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart