Pubdate: Tue, 27 Oct 1998 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 1998 Houston Chronicle Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Author: Larry Rohter, New York Times DRUG TRAFFICKERS MAKING HAITI A KEY TRANSIT POINT PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti -- Sensing a singular opportunity in a country weakened by a paralyzed government and an inexperienced police force, Colombian and Dominican drug traffickers have made Haiti the fastest-growing transit point for cocaine on its way to the United States, American and Haitian law enforcement officials say. Barry McCaffrey, the retired general who is President Clinton's drug policy director, visited in early October and described the situation as "clearly an emergency," warning that Haiti had become "the principal focus" of groups trafficking drugs in the Caribbean. In an interview here, Pierre Denize, chief of the Haitian National Police, offered an almost identical assessment. "The intensity of the problem is new and the capacity of law enforcement, at least in the Republic of Haiti, is very limited," he said. "We have limited resources, limited training, limited intelligence and investigative capacity, and a very, very limited capacity to control a coast that, geographically, is just across the street from Colombia." American officials estimate that 15 percent of all the cocaine consumed in the United States now passes through Haiti, about four tons a month. By their calculation, that figure has doubled in little more than a year, and is, they say, in large part a result of their increased success in blocking smuggling routes farther east in the Caribbean, in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. All along Haiti's southern coast, indications of landings by fast boats from Colombia have increased, as have reports of airdrops in coastal waters. Seizures at the airport here are up, especially on flights from places near Colombia, like Panama and the Netherlands Antilles. U.S. Customs officials have noted a corresponding increase in drugs found aboard Haitian freighters docking in Miami. Another sign of the surge in drug trafficking is that the Drug Enforcement Administration and other American agencies are beefing up their presence here and trying to forge closer ties with Haitian agencies that are weak and inefficient. From just one agent here a year ago, the DEA contingent is to grow to seven. In an interview, Robert Manuel, Haiti's secretary of state for public security, acknowledged that his country was the "point of least resistance" in the region, and thus an attractive target to the cocaine cartels. That is an inevitable result, he said, of having to organize from scratch a 6,000-member civilian police force, a process he called "a nightmare." After the landing of 20,000 American troops here four years ago, the Haitian armed forces, which included a police force headed by an officer later indicted in the United States on drug trafficking charges, were abolished. The new police force includes a small coast guard, but that force has one base and fewer than 10 vessels. Most of those are fast boats confiscated from Colombian traffickers and only about half of them are working at any one time. Haiti is also the poorest country in the hemisphere, and that appeals greatly to traffickers. "This is a cheaper place" for cartels to operate than Mexico or the Dominican Republic, an American official here said, with a huge pool of hungry people desperate for any kind of work. "Laborers earn 15 cents an hour, so getting people to risk their lives is less difficult" and the bribes that have to be paid are smaller, the official said. But Haiti's traditional vulnerability has been amplified by a political squabble between two factions of the Lavalas movement, which has been in power since American troops deposed a military dictatorship four years ago. The political crisis, which has lasted 16 months, has left the country without a functioning government. "They are always searching for the fissures, and they found one in Haiti," McCaffrey said of the drug cartels. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry