Pubdate: Sun, 28 Dec 2008
Source: Sunday Business Post (Ireland)
Copyright: 2008 The Sunday Business Post
Contact:  http://www.sbpost.ie/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/577
Author: John Burke
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

DRUG WAR RUMBLES ON

When Spanish law enforcement officers commandeered a  40-foot yacht 
off the Galician coast last August, they  praised the assistance of 
law enforcement agencies  across Europe who had helped lead them to 
the 3.8  tonnes of cannabis resin on board.

But what the officer in charge didn't mention was that  the 
intelligence which led to the seizure - described  as a "major 
operation" against hashish smuggling in  the EU - had come directly 
from Irish customs sources.

During 2008, Irish-led intelligence played a key role  in seizures, 
not just at home, but also in a number of  operations against Dutch, 
Spanish and African drug  gangs importing narcotics to continental Europe.

The Spanish haul led to the arrest of three Dutch  citizens and the 
seizure of a Euro 400,000  Dutch-flagged yacht, which was steered by 
Spanish  customs into the port of La Coruna. The operation had  begun 
with intelligence gathered by Irish customs  officers in Dublin. That 
information travelled in real  time via the Portuguese capital 
Lisbon, where Irish  customs and excise antinarcotic intelligence is 
shared among liaison officers from French, Spanish, 
British,  Portuguese, Italian and Dutch law enforcement.

Spain, with its extensive coastline, is Europe's main  point of entry 
for Moroccan cannabis and for cocaine  from South America, mostly 
from Colombia. The level of  cooperation between EU law enforcement 
is a result of  governments realising that Spain's drug problem is 
also Ireland's and Britain's drug problem, and vice versa.

Michael Colgan, director of the Irish customs and  excise drug 
enforcement unit, said that the past  12months had been a time of 
major change in the Irish  fight against drugs. "The biggest things 
that have  affected on our work have been the assignment of a 
full-time officer with Interpol and an officer assigned  to the new 
centre in Lisbon," he said.

Colgan doesn't hide his pride that the Revenue  Commissioners were 
instrumental in pushing for a  seven-state agreement in 2006 that led 
to the  establishment of the Maritime Analysis and Operations  Centre 
- -Narcotics (MAOC-N),which is based in Lisbon and  has been fully 
operational since late 2007.

"We held a conference here in 2006 to promote the  agenda of getting 
a MAOCN agreement. It's hard to get  an agreement between seven 
countries, but the  conference lent an impetus that had a significant 
effect on moving the issue forward," he said.

"The Lisbon operation is made up of several experts -  some in law 
enforcement, others in customs and excise -  working in co-located 
premises with their direct  counterparts. They have access to all the 
intelligence  that we have here and that the respective counterparts 
have in their home state, and they can put that at each  other's disposal."

For the Irish, the new collaboration works particularly  well, partly 
because it is business as usual. The  MAOC-N is headed by Tim 
Manhire, a former senior  British customs official and latterly a 
member of Britain's serious organised crime agency (Soca).

Three years ago, Soca took over as Britain's main  intelligence-led 
agency, tackling class A drugs,  organised immigration crime, fraud, 
e-crime, firearms  and the recovery of the proceeds of crime.

"Our long-standing relationship was with people in HM  Customs and 
Excise, who have been taken into Soca,"  said Colgan.

"These are the same people we've been dealing with -  our prime 
contacts - for over ten years. We would have  worked very well 
together, but we wouldn't have had the  level of permanent 
cooperation that we have now  established."

The state's largest ever once-off drugs seizure - the  interception 
of a Euro 750million cocaine shipment off  the west Cork coast last 
month - emerged from  intelligence gathered by two British police 
agencies.  It culminated in the seizure of the British-registered 
yacht Dances With Waves 240 kilometres south of Mizen  Head.

Intelligence obtained by Soca and the Scottish Drug  Enforcement 
Agency (SDEA) suggested that the vessel was  due to rendezvous with a 
larger boat off the Caribbean  coast in early October, when it was 
due to take on  board a drugs consignment and transport it to Britain.

The yacht was tracked by US drug enforcement officers  in the 
Caribbean and, as it passed into European  waters, MAOC-N officials 
kept a close eye on its  movements, waiting for an opportunity to 
grab the crew  and cargo.

It was boarded by Irish naval personnel on November  7,when it looked 
like inclement weather might force the  crew to scuttle the yacht.

Ireland's partners in MAOC-N have the benefit of good  intelligence 
networks that are based on long-standing  ties with the countries 
where drugs are being either  sourced or moved.

"Bear in mind that we never colonised anywhere, but if  you look at a 
lot of the players in the mix - the  Portuguese, the Spanish, the 
Dutch - they all had big  empires, and the remnants of empires," Colgan said.

As a result, the Portuguese and Spanish police and  customs have 
strong linguistic and expatriate ties with  southern and central 
American states like Colombia and  Brazil. "The French have their 
contacts in Africa, the  Dutch have people in the Antilles, and the 
British were  everywhere," said Colgan.

The MAOC-N was set up to deal with cocaine trafficking  and, in 
particular, to examine the movement of drugs  from south and central 
America to the Caribbean and  into west Africa, where emerging 
cartels are  establishing themselves as major players in 
the  importation of narcotics to the EU.

Ireland is at the end of the supply chain, with cocaine  emerging in 
the Caribbean and travelling via Africa -  Benin and Guinea Bissau 
being major distribution hubs -  and ending up in either Holland or 
Britain prior to  making the last leg of the journey.

"The drug cartels are going into African communities  where there is 
no an established history of law  enforcement and are using big money 
or threats of  violence to set up distribution networks there to 
convey product on to Europe," said Colgan.

"These are also considered high-risk routes for other  products such 
as heroin." Due to the Mizen Head  seizure, which involved 1.9 tonnes 
of cocaine worth  Euro 750 million, the level of cocaine seizures in 
Ireland for 2008 will be off the chart in relation to  previous 
records - even when the Euro 400 million haul  that gardai recovered 
off the Cork coast in July 2007  is taken into account. Gardai and 
customs combined had  seized Euro 8 million worth of the drug by mid-2008.

While much of the media focus in recent years has been, 
understandably, on Ireland's increasing use of cocaine  as a 
recreational drug, heroin remains a major problem.  Heroin seizures 
by customs tripled over this year  compared to 2007. It is likely 
that increased demand  for the drug and a greater level of seizures 
by law enforcement officials have contributed to this rise.

Colgan has seen nothing to suggest that the recession  of recent 
months has dampened the demand for narcotics.  "I suppose, looking at 
heroin addicts, they will  continue to need to feed that habit. We 
are not seeing  any fall off yet," he said.

"Our seizures of heroin are up hugely. In all honesty,  we have found 
heroin the most difficult of all drugs to  detect, because it is 
usually very well concealed and  is moved around in relatively small 
consignments." In  the first 11 months of 2008, seizures of heroin by 
customs and excise have amounted to 70 kilos, compared  with 22.8 
kilos for the 12months of 2007.The  indications are that 2008 is 
destined to record the  highest seizures of the drug in the state's 
history,  with 91 kilos seized by gardai in the first six months  of 
the year alone.

Minister for Justice Dermot Ahern has told the Dail  that Ireland's 
heroin problem, which is part of a  pan-European issue, is directly 
linked to developments  in the production of the drug in Afghanistan, 
from  where 90 per cent of the heroin on sale in Europe  originates.

Ireland's role as part of a newly-empowered and  increasingly 
successful European drug-busting agency  comes amid widespread 
acknowledgement that the  international drugs market has changed 
significantly in  recent years. At the same time, the demands placed 
on  law enforcement have increased as new transit routes  pose 
different challenges in terms of intelligence  gathering.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom