Pubdate: Mon, 23 Jun 2003
Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA)
Copyright: 2003 San Jose Mercury News
Contact:  http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390
Author: T. Christian Miller, Los Angeles Times
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)

COLOMBIA COCAINE FLOWING THROUGH GUATEMALA

Corruption Fueling Drug Trade, Authorities Say

ZACAPA, Guatemala - An exploding drug trade aided by extensive government
corruption has turned Guatemala into the primary safe haven for Colombia's
cocaine headed through Mexico to the United States, according to U.S. and
Guatemalan authorities.

An estimated 200 metric tons of cocaine passed through Guatemala last year,
more than two-thirds of U.S. consumption of the drug, according to State
Department officials.

The increased flow -- nearly triple the amount estimated a decade ago -- has
turned parts of Guatemala into lawless zones ruled by family-controlled
transit cartels, a development all too clear in this dry and dusty frontier
state.

Here, where men wear holstered 9mm pistols in public and judges fear for
their lives, violence and corruption have exploded in recent months, say
local judicial officials.

``It's a kind of Old West,'' said Alberto Brunori, the regional director of
the United Nation's mission in Zacapa. ``There are a lot of people involved
in the drug trade. You can see that.''

U.S. concerns over Guatemala's role in the drug trade has been growing for
several years. In the 1990s, drugs moved from Colombia to the United States
through several Central American countries before arriving in Mexico.

Now, however, U.S. and Guatemalan anti-drug officials believe Colombian drug
traffickers have mostly consolidated their operations in Guatemala with the
cooperation -- or at least tolerance -- of current and former Guatemalan
government figures.

The drug trade has become so rampant that the Bush administration earlier
this year blacklisted Guatemala for failing to cooperate in the fight
against drugs -- one of only three such countries in the world; Burma and
Haiti were the others. However, the government waived the requirement that
the United States cut aid to Guatemala, citing the country's ongoing poverty
and social unrest.

The U.S. government has also convened a federal grand jury to investigate
charges of corruption involving highly placed government and ex-military
officials for laundering money through U.S. banks, said Guatemala's former
top anti-corruption prosecutor, Karen Fischer.

Fischer, who resigned in March after allegedly being pressured to drop a
money-laundering case involving President Alfonso Portillo, said she has
offered to serve as a witness for the U.S. case, which involves the
diversion of $15 million in government funds.

U.S. officials said that ``an investigation'' was under way into Guatemalan
government officials and money laundering, but did not confirm that a grand
jury was involved.

Guatemalan government officials deny that there are any direct, high-level
links to drug traffickers, though they acknowledge that there have been
shortcomings in the drug war the past few years. They blame the United
States for failing to provide enough assistance to combat drug traffickers,
whose speedy boats and airplanes overwhelm the underfunded Guatemalan police
force.

``When we detect a drug boat, we only see the bubbles in the water that they
leave behind,'' said Zury Rios, a congresswoman and daughter of ex-Gen.
Efrain Rios Montt, president of Congress. ``We need support and backing.''

Portillo has repeatedly declared his innocence of all criminal charges,
though the multiple investigations against him and his political allies have
placed him under pressure. He broke down in tears at a government ceremony
earlier this month after another scandal involving his political allies. He
told the audience that he was ``not going through my best moments, either as
a person or as the president.''

Indications of collaboration between drug traffickers and government
officials are numerous. Last year, officers from Guatemala's anti-drug
police force were accused by local prosecutors of stealing more cocaine from
police warehouses than they seized. More than a dozen anti-drug officers
were convicted this month of holding the small town of Chocon near the
Caribbean coast hostage as they tortured and killed two residents in an
attempt to steal two tons of cocaine.

Since the start of Portillo's administration, cocaine seizures dropped from
an average of 9.7 tons per year in the two years before Portillo took office
to an average of 2.8 tons per year over the past three years. U.S. officials
believe the decline reflects the effects of paid-off government officials,
not a decline in drug trafficking.

There have been some positive signs in recent months. The government seems
on the verge of signing a pact allowing the U.S. Coast Guard to stop and
search suspected drug boats in Guatemalan waters. Extraditions from
Guatemala to the United States have begun again after a 10-year hiatus.

Perhaps most important, at U.S. urging, the discredited anti-drug police
unit was disbanded last fall. In the first five months of this year, the
new, U.S. trained-unit has already seized more cocaine than was seized all
of last year -- 2.9 tons so far.
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