Pubdate: Sun, 12 Sep 1999 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 1999 The Miami Herald Contact: One Herald Plaza, Miami FL 33132-1693 Fax: (305) 376-8950 Website: http://www.herald.com/ Forum: http://krwebx.infi.net/webxmulti/cgi-bin/WebX?mherald Author: DON BOHNING, Herald Staff Writer ARMS-FOR-DRUGS DEALS RISE Suriname military at focal point, reports say On a weekend in mid-August, Brazilian police -- apparently acting on a tip -- seized a twin-engine Seneca airplane headed for Colombia with a load of weapons that had originated in neighboring Suriname. Aboard the plane, according to Brazilian press accounts, police found a rocket launcher capable of bringing down a small plane, two rockets, an AK-47 rifle with five clips, an Uzi submachine gun and hundreds of rounds of ammunition in a wooden box bearing markings of the Libyan armed forces. The apparent destination, according to Brazilian authorities: Colombia's Revolutionary Armed Forces (FARC), a guerrilla group that has been battling the Colombian military for decades and is currently conducting peace negotiations with that country's government. As arms caches go, it was peanuts. But it dramatized what international drug fighters believe is a flourishing arms-for-drugs trade involving Suriname's military. "We've been hearing the basic rumor for 18 months or two years now," a U.S. official said. "We don't know the volume, but we have the impression that it is mostly small-airplane loads leaving from Suriname's interior." Increased activity The State Department's 1999 International Narcotics Control Strategy Report notes that "police officials report an increase . . . in the number of arms-for-drugs swaps, with a going `exchange rate' of one kilo of cocaine for one automatic weapon." The report adds: "There are disturbing reports of money laundering, drug trafficking and associated criminal activity involving current and former government and military officials." "We see an emerging regional role of Suriname [in drug trafficking], whereas in the past the drug problem seemed to be of a rather local nature," said Jean-Luc Lemahieu, program manager for the Barbados-based U.N. Drug Control Program's Caribbean Coordination Mechanism. Lemahieu attributes the country's growing involvement to increased pressure on drug trafficking elsewhere in the hemisphere, Suriname's location and the "great and undeniable influence of the Suri Cartel on the government. It makes it a very interesting place for international crime organizations." Abundant evidence There is abundant public evidence to support suspicions of involvement by the Suriname military in such activities throughout the former Dutch colony of 450,000 people on the northeast shoulder of South America. Desi Bouterse, Suriname's former military ruler who retains considerable influence within the armed forces, was convicted by a Dutch court in July of making five cocaine shipments to the Netherlands and Belgium from 1989 to 1991. He was sentenced in absentia to 16 years in prison. Despite that, Bouterse is considered a likely candidate for Suriname's presidency in the next election -- and the probable winner. His conviction was based on evidence turned up in a five-year investigation by a special Dutch police unit that identified Bouterse as a leader of the so-called Suri Cartel. The Dutch prosecutor general announced on Dutch television in April 1997 that he had sufficient evidence to charge Bouterse. The next day, Suriname President Jules Wijdenbosh, a longtime ally of Bouterse, named him to the newly created post of state advisor, which provided diplomatic immunity for travel outside the country. Passing the blame In a post-conviction interview with the Associated Press, Bouterse accused the Dutch of being out to get him. "This whole thing is an ongoing fight with the Dutch," he said. "Nowadays it is drugs. Before, you were a communist, but that is no longer fashionable." Lt. Col. Marcel Zeeuw, another former Suriname army officer, was arrested by the Dutch on suspicion of cocaine trafficking when he went to The Hague to testify on Bouterse's behalf. He was released in June for insufficient evidence. Another longtime Bouterse associate, Col. Etienne Boerenveen, who was convicted in Miami in 1986 of conspiracy to smuggle drugs, currently serves as chief of staff to the defense minister. Boerenveen was deported from Florida in May 1991 after serving five years of a 12-year prison sentence. Bouterse, then Suriname's military ruler for the second time after staging a coup six months earlier, greeted Boerenveen when he arrived at the airport in Paramaribo, the Surinamese capital. Boerenveen was promoted two weeks later. More convictions In March 1998, Ronnie Brunswijk, a former Bouterse bodyguard who led a guerrilla movement against him in the 1980s, was convicted on drug-trafficking charges by a Dutch court and sentenced in absentia to eight years in prison. In April of this year, Brazil's TV Globo reported allegations that Rupert Christopher, Suriname's ambassador in Brazil and a former defense minister under Bouterse, was implicated in the drug trade with Bouterse. A short time earlier, Bouterse's son Dino was reportedly recalled from Suriname's embassy in Brazil after authorities found evidence that he had been using his diplomatic immunity to smuggle drugs. On Aug. 23, Interpol issued an international arrest warrant at the request of Belgium for Ruben Peiter, commander of the Suriname police mobile unit. The Belgians suspect Peiter, believed to have been vacationing in the Netherlands when the warrant was issued, of shipping cocaine in timber shipments. U.S. interests With the drug traffic through Suriname oriented more toward Europe, it has been only recently that Washington has taken a growing interest in the country. A maritime cooperation agreement was finalized last month. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration still covers the country from its office in Curacao, although American officials say they hope to get a permanent DEA presence in Paramaribo within the next year or so. "It's a wide-open transit country, and a permanent DEA presence is necessary," a U.S. official said. e-mail: - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck