Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement


Foreign briefing

Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 07 July 2008
WITH the rescue of Ingrid Betancourt it looks like one of the world's most powerful drugs cartels, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc), is falling apart.
On 14 May the biggest drugs traffickers in the country (from the right-wing paramilitaries, the Farc's sworn enemies), were extradited to the United States. So is the drugs war finally being won, and the fuel that feeds the 44-year civil conflict dry
ing up?

Far, far from it. The United Nations has just released its annual drug survey, showing that drug crops in Colombia – specifically coca, the raw material for cocaine – have seen a 27 per cent increase.

So there are more drugs than ever leaving Colombian shores, with the most conservative estimate put at 600 tonnes per year, and the real figure more likely inching up towards 1,000 tonnes per year.

So if the Farc are on the ropes, the right-wing paramilitaries now officially disbanded and the biggest civilian cartel (called the Norte Del Valle cartel) has been smashed, then who is handling all this coke and earning the billions of pounds that cocaine sales produce around the world?

The answer to that is everybody and nobody. The "everybody" are individual guerrilla commanders who have set up their own drug empires, new organised crime gangs that, super-heavily-armed, have taken over where the paramilitaries left off and the underlings of the Norte Del Valle cartel who have seamlessly continued running the drug routes their bosses set up. The "nobodies" are capos who have learnt from the mistakes of their fallen predecessors.

Here in Medellin – once home to the most famous drugs trafficker of them all, Pablo Escobar, who was gunned down on a rooftop in 1993 – history simply repeats itself.

You can buy a kilo of cocaine here for about £1,000. Get that kilo to Miami, and you can sell it for £12,000. Take it to London, it's worth £20,000. Move it to Moscow or Tokyo, and that same kilo will fetch up to £40,000.

Most Colombians live on less than £2,000 a year; you do the maths. They do, and so there is no shortage of people ready to step into the breach every time a capo is taken out.



Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 06 July 2008 9:53 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Lobeydoser,

07/07/2008 00:24:08
"You can buy a kilo of cocaine here for about £1,000. Take it to London, it's worth £20,000. Move it to Moscow or Tokyo, and that same kilo will fetch up to £40,000".

Phew! Can you order on-line?
2

catgut,

pomona 07/07/2008 07:13:35
FARC dont operate in Medellin. This now makes government officials the biggest drug dealers in the country.
The end of FARC will be welcomed by many on the left in Columbia. Uribe the president is the last western puppet ruler in South America. The guy was mayor of Medellin back in the snorting years 1982.
Where has all the mone from Plan Columbia gone?
What is the wealth gap in Columbia these days?
3

Hilary,

Edinburgh 07/07/2008 11:32:25
# Catgut:

You betray your "immense" understanding of Colombia and its affairs by being unable even to spell the country correctly.

Your gags about the government as drug dealers are pretty contemptuous when you consider what the narcos, and western consumption, have done to the country and its people. How many of the ruling classes did escobar and his pals bump off?
What of V-P Santos' efforts to stop us all giggling away at the "entertaining" exploits of drug-takers like Moss, Winehouse and Alex James?

If Uribe is a puppet - how do you justify two elections where he has received the biggest majority in recent Colombian history? Or is democracy an unfortunate distraction?

You may not like Uribe, and he is certainly out of step with the trendy and hopelessly ineffective Chavezian puppets like Morales (or Toledo previously).
But his people voted for him, he never tried a coup, like Chavez did, and he is getting results.

Does that truth hurt?
4

Number 6,

Germany 07/07/2008 13:55:36
The problem for Uribe is that he is an American puppet.
It was they who ordered him into Ecuador recentley. Drop his relationship with the US and he will be ok.

The strangest thing in this whole affair is the fact the US made no attempt to rescue their own agents, simply left them to rot. Notice how they are being kept away from the public, so we don't ask them any akward questions. The regime is hoping people will forget about them and they can slip into anonamous retirement without voicing their complaints of their abandonment by their own country.

Hilary, was Chavez not elected too ??
5

Hilary,

Edinburgh 07/07/2008 14:12:07
Chavez tried a coup in the early 90's. His conversion to popular democracy is belated...

Uribe had plenty of reasons of his own to go into Ecuador. The results are there to see now, and he made no effort to back away or apologise.

There's puppets with a lot shorter strings than Uribe's...

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.