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South Caucasus: Region Growing As Hub For Int'l Drug Trafficking

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  • South Caucasus: Region Growing As Hub For Int'l Drug Trafficking

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
    March 9 2004


    South Caucasus: Region Growing As Hub For International Drug
    Trafficking
    By Jean-Christophe Peuch


    Central Asia is known as the preferred route for Afghan-produced
    narcotics destined for West European markets. But drug-enforcement
    officials say the South Caucasus -- strategically located between
    Asia and Europe -- is also a major transit point for narcotics.
    Corruption, instability, and separatist conflicts are all cited as
    being behind the region's rise in smuggling.


    Prague, 9 March 2004 (RFE/RL) -- On 1 March, the U.S. State
    Department's Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement
    Affairs (INL) released its annual review of progress in the global
    fight against drug trafficking.

    The INL's "International Narcotics Control Strategy Report" praises
    recent efforts made by the three South Caucasus republics of Armenia,
    Azerbaijan, and Georgia in curbing illicit drug trade. The three
    nations are all signatories of the three existing United Nations
    drug-control conventions. Since 2001 they have been engaged in the
    UN-sponsored Southern Caucasus Anti-Drug program, also known as SCAD.
    In addition, all three have taken steps to curb trafficking and
    prevent domestic drug use.

    Armenia last year implemented a law on narcotics and psychotropic
    substances and is currently working on a draft bill to combat money
    laundering. Also last year, then-Georgian President Eduard
    Shevardnadze signed into law an anti-laundering bill that was
    strengthened last month by the country's new leadership. Azerbaijan
    is currently working on a similar legal package that could be
    approved by parliament by the end of this year.

    "The money that is generated by drug smuggling is being used to
    purchase weapons and ammunition. It also serves to finance these
    separatist regimes."Yet, the INL believes a lot more remains for
    these countries to do in the fight against drug trafficking,
    especially since they are located in an area that is an important
    transit route for illicit trade to Western Europe. The U.S. agency
    expresses particular concern regarding Azerbaijan, which it says has
    emerged as a drug-trafficking hub after armed conflicts in former
    Yugoslavia disrupted traditional routes linking Iran to Western
    Europe via Turkey and the Balkans.

    International experts believe heroin represents up to 80 percent of
    the illicit drugs transited through the region. Opium and marijuana
    are also smuggled.

    Mezahir Efendiyev is Azerbaijan's national coordinator for the SCAD
    program. He told RFE/RL a number of factors are contributing to the
    region's emergence as a major drug-trafficking route. "If one takes
    into account, on the one hand, the fact that the three South Caucasus
    countries are geographically located between Asia and Europe and, on
    the other hand, the fact that the CIS states represent a major market
    for heroin, it is natural that this route should suit the drug
    mafias," he said. "This route, which originates in Afghanistan and
    goes to Europe through the South Caucasus and the rest of the CIS, is
    a very easy one. In addition, these countries acceded to independence
    roughly 10 years ago and they lack the modern technology that would
    enable them to prevent drug transit through the South Caucasus area."


    Pavel Pachta works with the International Narcotics Control Board
    (INCB), a Vienna-based body that monitors implementation of UN drug
    conventions worldwide. He says the industrial South Caucasus area --
    which lies at the crossroads of the so-called Balkan Route and its
    sister "Silk Road Route" linking Afghanistan to Europe through
    Central Asia -- is important not only as a transit point for drugs,
    but also as a potential provider of chemicals for Afghan-based heroin
    producers.

    "The countries of the Caucasus are very close to these routes and,
    undoubtedly, there have been and there are attempts to use [them] for
    smuggling. On the one hand, drugs are coming from Afghanistan to the
    markets where there is a demand for them. On the other hand,
    chemicals are going in the [opposite] direction, because to
    manufacture heroin you need chemicals -- for example, acetic
    anhydride -- and these chemicals are smuggled into Afghanistan,"
    Pachta said.

    The INCB, which released its own annual report on 3 March, notes
    Afghanistan's production of opiates increased by 8 percent last year.
    The report blames authorities in neighboring Turkmenistan -- a major
    transit point for Afghan-made narcotics -- for failing to cooperate
    with the international community in the fight against drug
    trafficking.

    International experts say Afghan-produced drugs reach Azerbaijan, the
    easternmost of the Caucasus republics, through two main routes. One
    goes directly through Turkmenistan and the Caspian Sea. Another
    crosses the 611-kilometer-long land border between Azerbaijan and
    Iran. A third suspected route is the flight path recently opened
    between Kabul and Baku, although the INL says there is so far no
    evidence to support that theory.

    Widespread corruption and the various armed conflicts that have
    plagued the South Caucasus since the late 1980s both contribute to
    making the region a haven for illicit trafficking. Georgia and
    Azerbaijan have each lost at least a quarter of their territory to
    separatist conflicts. Drug-enforcement officials say the
    self-proclaimed governments now leading these breakaway regions are
    suspected of profiteering from illegal trade, including drug
    trafficking. Authorities in Azerbaijan claim the breakaway enclave of
    Nagorno-Karabakh has become not only a favored transit route for
    drugs smuggled from Iran, but also a major heroin production center.

    Mezahir Efendiyev of the UN-sponsored SCAD program says international
    drug experts have been barred from Karabakh by local rulers, and are
    thus unable to verify these claims. He also says a significant
    section of Azerbaijan's southern border has been under the control of
    ethnic Armenian troops for the past decade, making it even more
    difficult for the Azerbaijani government to fight drug trafficking
    from Iran.

    Paata Nozadze is SCAD's national coordinator for Georgia. He says
    separatist conflicts in Abkhazia and South Ossetia have created
    similar problems for the central government in Tbilisi. "These
    so-called hot spots, or uncontrolled areas, perfectly suit drug
    traffickers," he said. "The money that is generated by drug smuggling
    is being used to purchase weapons and ammunition. It also serves to
    finance these separatist regimes. This situation perfectly suits drug
    traffickers because all they have to do is strike a deal with local
    governments. Elsewhere they would have to make separate arrangements
    with border guards, customs officers, policemen, or state security
    officials. For them these conflict zones are much more advantageous."


    Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili on 11 February described
    Abkhazia as a drug-trafficking corridor, prompting a swift protest
    from the separatist leadership in Sukhum.

    Also last month, the recently elected South Caucasus leader -- who
    based his campaign on pledges to fight crime and corruption --
    launched a security sweep to disarm Georgian guerrillas based in the
    western Samegrelo (Mingrelia) region, an area that borders Abkhazia.
    The so-called Forest Brothers group is suspected of controlling
    smuggling activities in the area in conjunction with Abkhaz groups
    and Russian peacekeepers posted on the other side of the demarcation
    line that separates the province from the rest of Georgia.

    Narcotics reach Georgia from Azerbaijan, South Ossetia, Turkey, and,
    to a lesser extent, from Armenia. A report prepared in 2002 for the
    Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency says illicit
    drugs are then transited either through Abkhazia, the Black Sea port
    of Poti, or Batumi, the capital of the autonomous region of Adjaria.
    >From there, they travel on to Ukraine and Romania.

    Only a small percentage of illegal drugs transiting through the South
    Caucasus region are seized by law enforcement agencies.

    In Azerbaijan, which for two years has been receiving U.S.
    counternarcotics assistance through the Freedom Support Act, the
    Interior Ministry last year conducted a nationwide operation against
    drug traffickers and local producers of poppy and cannabis plants.

    SCAD program coordinator Efendiyev says that although Azerbaijan has
    shown some progress in combating drug trafficking, it still has a
    long way to go. "Only 10 to 15 percent of drugs that go through
    Azerbaijan are seized by our law enforcement agencies," he said. "In
    2003, they seized over 211 kilograms of narcotic substances and
    destroyed more than 290 [tons] of narcotic plants. By comparison, no
    plantations were destroyed in Armenia and, in Georgia, only 34 tons
    were destroyed."

    This month's report by the Bureau for International Narcotics and Law
    Enforcement Affairs notes that although corruption permeates
    Azerbaijan's law enforcement sector, there is no evidence that local
    police officers are participating in the illicit production or
    distribution of narcotics. By contrast, in neighboring Georgia, a
    number of police officers were recently arrested and charged with
    involvement in the narcotics trade.

    The amount of drugs seized in that country remains particularly low.
    Georgia's SCAD coordinator Paata Nozadze told RFE/RL: "The figures
    for 2003 are very small. They include only 3 kilograms of heroin, 8.3
    kilograms of opium, and 42.4 kilograms of marijuana. This is all that
    has officially been seized. This is very little." The Georgian expert
    believes a lack of coordination among the agencies involved in the
    antinarcotics fight could explain why the amount of illegal drugs
    seized in the country is so small.

    But there could be other reasons. A number of counternarcotics
    officials and policemen suspected of involvement in illicit trade
    activities were recently arrested in Georgia. This suggests that
    large volumes of contraband drugs are being unofficially seized,
    diverted and resold on the fast-expanding local black market.

    Official statistics say there are just 18,000 drug users in Georgia,
    a country of roughly 4 million. But independent experts believe the
    actual number of drug consumers in that country is somewhere between
    100,000 and 300,000.
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