Pubdate: Thu, 20 Jun 2002
Source: Washington Times (DC)
Copyright: 2002 News World Communications, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.washingtontimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/492
Author: Carmen Gentile, United Press International

IMPRISONED DRUG LORD HAS MISSILE DELIVERED

SAO PAULO, Brazil -- One of Brazil's most notorious drug lords bought a 
shoulder-launched anti-aircraft missile from an arms dealer by telephone 
while serving time in a Rio maximum-security prison, Brazilian officials said.

A federal police official said Tuesday that police took custody of the 
missile, which was found in the prison director's office, and have 
dismantled it.

Federal authorities believe the director was involved in negotiations for 
the sale of the weapon, the official told UPI.

In a separate statement faxed to UPI on Tuesday, the Public Ministry of Rio 
de Janeiro state said it learned of convicted drug lord Fernandinho 
Beira-Mar's plot to purchase the missile through extensive phone taps.

According to more than 20 hours of recorded conversation, Beira-Mar on 
several occasions had contacted an arms dealer from inside the Bangu One 
prison in Rio de Janeiro state and negotiated the purchase of an 
anti-aircraft missile that was manufactured in Argentina.

"As absurd as it might seem, it was verified that from within the prison, 
prisoners can acquire military arms used by international forces like 
Stinger missiles," said the statement sent to UPI.

The statement went on to list other types of weapons such as grenades, 
rifles and ammunition that prisoners can acquire "to equip their 
subordinates [on the outside] to maintain control" of their criminal empires.

Other law-enforcement officials say that drug lords like Beira-Mar -- who 
are serving lengthy sentences in what are termed "maximum security prisons" 
- -- are controlling their drug empires with relative ease via telephone.

Earlier this year, prison authorities staged raids in several prisons in 
Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo states and confiscated numerous cell phones 
used by prisoners to contact criminal associates outside.

Initial reports by Brazilian media said Beira-Mar had negotiated the 
purchase of the missile with an arms dealer who supplied similar missiles 
to al Qaeda, the Islamic terrorist network led by Osama bin Laden.

But the federal police official denied the deal was in any way connected to 
al Qaeda.

"Those reports are all one big lie," the official said.

Brazilian media have reported in the past that arms smugglers linked to 
Islamic terrorists are operating in the country.

Several reports last year said al Qaeda operatives traffic arms in what is 
termed South America's triborder region -- an area where the borders of 
Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay converge and that is host to a large Arab 
population.

The U.S. State Department, however, maintains the reports "had been 
disproved or remained uncorroborated by intelligence and law-enforcement 
officials," according to the department's 2001 report on global terrorism.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens