In September last year the
While for political reasons, President Hugo Chavez will not allow US aircraft to monitor over Venezuelan airspace, the president has turned to the Chinese to provide him with radar systems, and suggested a law to shoot down drug smuggling flights, a policy which had great success in
There have been some very notable arrests of drug traffickers in
In September 2010, authorities captured one of the last leaders of the Colombian Norte Del Valle Cartel, Jaime Alberto Marín, alias "Beto Marín." In the indictments against him and other members of the Norte Del Valle gang, the group was accused of shipping some 200 tons of cocaine into the
Chavez is now having to pay attention to the rise in crime for domestic reasons, not just under international pressure. Almost all types of violent crime are rising, which in part is due to the drugs passing through his country, which not only have a corrupting influence and stimulate local consumption, but have helped give birth to a criminal underclass, which engages in widespread murder, kidnapping and extortion. The murder rate is now over 48 per 100,000 of the population, the highest in South America and
Chavez's relationship with the Colombian rebel group of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), has already been well documented. The FARC are believed to smuggling tons of cocaine into
What was made clear in confessions by Venezuelan drug lord Walid Makled, captured in Colombia but extradited to Venezuela in May 2011, is that the military play an important role in drug trafficking in Venezuela. He said that he had paid off over 40 generals to allow his drug smuggling business to flourish. The military control the borders, the airports and ports, in short most of the entry and departure points for drug shipments. They also can escort drug shipments that cross the country.
Makled’s allegations were supported by international intelligence agencies which insisted that while Colombian groups still control much of the cocaine passing through
Chavez has an almost praetorian regime. He relies on a large number of active or former military officers in his government. He cannot take the issue of military corruption head on, as this could undermine his control of the insititutions of state. Many of the military units that guard the border or airports have come to rely on the second “salary” they earn through payments from drug traffickers and would resist any serious attempts to stop the flow of drugs.
So
The Colombian TCOs are increasingly diversifying their markets away from the
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