An
assessment by the security forces reportedly says that Ecuador is home
to an increasing number of organized criminal groups, and that the authorities
have underestimated the problem. El
Comercio reports that a review by the military says that drug trafficking and
organized crime may soon overwhelm the country, if "adequate
measures" are not taken in time. According
to the newspaper, the 225-page report warns that if drug-related violence
rises, the army will charged with tackling the problem. Foreign
drug trafficking organizations like the Sinaloa Cartel have been present in
Ecuador
"for years," according to a police intelligence report quoted by
El Comercio.
According
to the newspaper, the police report suggests that the security forces have
underestimated the extent of the problem because drug-related killings are
relatively low compared to Mexico.
"What is worrying is that the authorities do not fully understand what is
happening with the problem of organized crime. The 'Mexico
effect' is not yet visible in Ecuador,"
the report says.
The police
assessment reportedly says that the main entry points for drug shipments
include the cities of Macara, Tulcan, San Lorenzo,
and Nueva Loja (see map, below). The primary exit points for drug shipments
headed overseas are the port cities of Manta, Esmeraldas, Muisne, Puna,
Rocafuerte, and Puerto Bolivar.
Drug
traffickers use go-fast boats and submarines to transport their wares from the
coast, then meet up with boats on the high seas who collect the cocaine loads
and take them to Honduras,
the document reportedly says. Other times, go-fast boats stop at the Galapagos
islands to refuel and continue on to Central America.
The report
adds that two major drug seizures in 2007 and 2008, part of an operation dubbed
Green Hurricane, are evidence of Ecuador's increased importance as a
drug transit country for transnational criminal groups. During the operation,
narcotics police seized 3.78 tons of cocaine in southern Ecuador, and another 4.70 tons near the border
with Colombia.
These
reported negative assesments from the security forces are an indication that
they believe they lack the resources to properly confront organized crime. The
government recently ordered some 7,000 soldiers and 3,000 police to the
northern frontier with Colombia,
after President Rafael Correa said that border was "the gravest security
problem facing the country."
But the
northern border region is just one part of the problem. Along the country's
coasts, trafficking gangs are increasingly reliant on semi-submersibles to
transport cocaine. Police found a 12-acre poppy field in central Ecuador in
December, a highly unusual discovery in a country that is generally free of
illicit drug crops. In Quito,
Colombian gangs have been accused of controlling much of the local drug trade. One
US drug official described Ecuador as the
"United Nations" of organized crime, due to the number of
transnational criminal groups (including Russian and Chinese) that have set up
shop here.
Mexican
groups in particular have a growing foothold in Ecuador. In February, police
arrested a man described as the main link between the Sinaloa Cartel and
Colombian drug trafficker Daniel Barrera, alias "El Loco." Authorities arrested
nine operatives who allegedly worked for the Mexican group in Ecuador last year; the investigation also led to
the arrest of a top Sinaloa Cartel lieutenant, Victor Felix, in Mexico. The
Sinaloa Cartel reportedly has two armed cells working along Ecuador's
southern border. According to the US State Department, the Zetas, the Gulf
Cartel, and Colombian rebel group the FARC all move cocaine through Ecuador.
If the security forces have in fact warned that
organized crime could spill out of control unless measures are taken, this
suggests that the situation is becoming critical. If authorities do not meet
the challenge, it may yet turn into a national crisis.
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