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Drug gangs pose grave threat, EU agency warns

Out­go­ing dir­ector says South Amer­ican cocaine is fuel­ling cor­rup­tion and viol­ence

Busted: Spanish police with cocaine found in a shipping container from Ecuador

Crim­inal drug gangs have become a grave threat to European secur­ity by flood­ing the streets with South Amer­ican cocaine, seek­ing to cor­rupt offi­cials and hir­ing a new wave of paid assas­sins, accord­ing to the EU’s drugs agency.

Due to fin­an­cial crises, ter­ror­ism, Covid-19 and the Ukraine war, European poli­cy­makers had not paid enough atten­tion to the crim­inal organ­isa­tions that had built sprawl­ing drugs busi­nesses, said Alexis Goos­deel, out­go­ing EU Drugs Agency (EUDA) dir­ector.

Now, Europe was belatedly wak­ing up to the “hyper-avail­ab­il­ity” of illegal drugs and to traf­fick­ers’ per­vas­ive attempts to intim­id­ate and cor­rupt offi­cials in ports, police forces and the judi­ciary, Goos­deel added.

“We dis­covered the tip of the ice­berg and we have not seen what is under the sur­face,” he told the Fin­an­cial Times at the end of his 10-year term as head of the Lis­bon-based EUDA. “I think for the moment it’s not even pos­sible to ima­gine the dimen­sions.”

This year has served up stark examples. A police union in south­ern Spain said the state had “lost con­trol” of the fight against traf­fick­ers. A judge said Bel­gium was at risk of becom­ing a “narco-state”. And the killing of an anti­drug act­iv­ist’s brother in Mar­seille heightened fears that France was head­ing the same way.

Goos­deel said the trade in illi­cit drugs posed a “mul­ti­di­men­sional” men­ace to Europe, extend­ing from lethal viol­ence to insti­tu­tional cor­rup­tion. “The threat today is very high,” he said.

This month, the European Com­mis­sion unveiled a new nar­cot­ics action plan, call­ing drug traf­fick­ing a “major threat to Europeans’ well­being” that deman­ded a “stronger, co-ordin­ated response across the EU”.

The biggest recent change has been a surge in the pro­duc­tion and traf­fick­ing of cocaine, mainly from Colom­bia, Peru and Bolivia, Goos­deel said.

“For the last six, seven years we have seen a really expo­nen­tial increase in the avail­ab­il­ity of cocaine on the European mar­ket, with stable prices, a very high level of pur­ity,” he said. As a res­ult, “there is pres­sure from the pro­du­cers to find new cus­tom­ers or to make cus­tom­ers use more”, cre­at­ing sharper com­pet­i­tion between rival drug organ­isa­tions.

Europe is also exper­i­en­cing a rise of “crime as a ser­vice”, includ­ing hired assas­sins to take out rivals and con­tract­ors who can set up indus­trial-scale amphet­am­ine labs. “Assas­sin­a­tion as a ser­vice involves young people who are recruited using social media,” Goos­deel said. “They are brought to another coun­try to com­mit a crime, then they are brought back.”

Goos­deel said it was not pos­sible to know how recent US strikes on alleged Venezuelan drug-traf­fick­ing boats would affect Europe “because there is no doc­u­ment­a­tion” and “there were no legal cases brought against those people and those boats”.

The ubi­quity of drugs in Europe is linked in part to large-scale traf­fick­ing via com­mer­cial ship­ping con­tain­ers, an import route that was far less com­mon 10 years ago, he said.

Ports are join­ing forces to fight traf­fick­ing. Some, such as Ant­werp, have intro­duced stricter con­trols on dock­ers, includ­ing bio­met­ric IDs and pre­set time­frames for access to con­tain­ers and cranes. But Goos­deel said that had promp­ted crim­inal gangs to shift their atten­tion to man­agers who con­trol con­tainer move­ments.

“Crim­inal organ­isa­tions will not eas­ily renounce cor­rup­tion. Cor­rup­tion is a way for them to reach their object­ives,” he said. “They try at every level.”

But Goos­deel said there has been an “encour­aging” increase in European crim­in­als finally being extra­dited from their sanc­tu­ar­ies in Dubai, which remains home to notori­ous fig­ures includ­ing Daniel Kina­han, the Irish boss of the Kina­han organ­ised crime group.

He said gov­ern­ments must go bey­ond enforce­ment to address why demand for dan­ger­ous sub­stances — both illi­cit drugs and mis­used medi­cines — was rising. “Using sub­stances at dif­fer­ent moments in our life or in the day to cope with anxi­ety, with dif­fi­culties or to improve our per­form­ance is much more wide­spread than it was 10 or 20 years ago,” he said.

He linked the change to socio-eco­nomic pres­sures, such as the struggles of young people to find a job or afford a home, plus anxi­ety over Covid and the Ukraine war. “We need to under­stand that the fact that we have more users doesn’t mean that they are all crim­in­als or all addicts,” Goos­deel said.

A new approach would involve more invest­ment in harm reduc­tion plus new treat­ment pro­to­cols for drug depend­ence, espe­cially on cocaine. “We are at a moment where it’s really time to find a way to rein­vest in liv­ing together,” he said.

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