Environmental Fall Out from Cocaine Wars

Posted by azdrugrehabctr on June 14, 2017 under Addiction Trends, AZ Drug Rehab News | Comments are off for this article

South American and the United States have had a long, tumultuous relationship when it comes to fighting the war on drugs. Traditionally, U.S. citizens have demanded cocaine, and the cartels in South America have been more than willing to supply the drug. Working together, the South American and U.S. governments have made some progress in hindering the passage of drugs across country lines, but things have not always gone smoothly, and a new study shows that there are major environmental repercussions to one of the of the most aggressive campaigns against cocaine.

Drug money is illegal. This means that cartels often have to hide their money in phony businesses or route it through cash paying businesses to hide its original origin. Constant scrutiny, and continuous monitoring by the United States and South American governments have prompted drug cartels to find massive plots of lands that are more remote and further away from prying eyes. However, upon arriving at these areas, cartels then have to eliminate the rain forest that has claimed the spot for thousands of years. In order to facilitate the destruction of thousands of acres of forest at a time, trees are often burned to the ground to make way for the planting of coca plants.

“Starting in the early 2000s, the United States-led drug enforcement in the Caribbean and Mexico pushed drug traffickers into places that were harder to patrol, like the large forested areas of Central America. A flood of illegal drug money entered these places and these drug traffickers needed a way that they could spend it,” explained David Wrathall, an Oregon State University geographer and one of the authors of the study.

Consequently, indigenous people who have worked off the land for generations are now left without work, making them more susceptible to bribes, and job offers by their new cartel neighbors. And perhaps the biggest victim of this type of deforestation is the wildlife that relied on the rainforest for shelter and food. According to the new research, approximately 30% of the total rain forest loss in Honduras, Guatemala and Nicaragua in the last ten years can be traced back to cocaine trafficking.

Cocaine Traffickers Winning the Drug War

Posted by azdrugrehabctr on October 20, 2015 under Addiction Trends | Comments are off for this article

Americans who consume cocaine likely have purchased the drug from a dealer or a friend. They use the drug recreationally or habitually, but very rarely does anyone really consider where the powerful narcotic actually came from. Most of the cocaine that is smuggled into the country comes from Peru and other South American countries. Across the border there are wars, crimes, and murders committed every day so that the cocaine trade can continue. South American governments work tirelessly to combat the drug traffickers, but United States residents and their insatiable demand for cocaine, help to fuel the cocaine trade and war.

In an attempt to deal a severe blow to drug traffickers, many are calling for the ability to better monitor the air space over the Amazon rainforest. Deep within the forest, cocaine manufacturers utilize small planes to deposit money and pick up large packages of cocaine. These transactions do not only deal with cocaine that is destined for the U.S. Countries all over the world receive shipments of cocaine that originated deep within the Amazon forest. Preventing these drop-offs and pick-ups can be essential to putting a dent in the drug trafficking of cocaine, but officials are having a difficult time getting the funding for personnel and tighter control of the area.

“One way of being able to corral and diminish drug trafficking’s speed and efficiency is to get control of the air space. But the government has shown that it’s not interested,” explained retired air force Maj. Gen. Cesar Torres. One reason why Torres and other advocates of more Amazon control are meeting with resistance is because a significant amount of those that are tasked with monitoring the air field are corrupt. While this has not been proven, it is rumored that officials charge the drug cartels $10,000 to land and take off without police intervention.

Despite destroying record amounts of coca plants, the government in Peru still manages to allow more cocaine than ever to be produced. Until the police corruption is handled, the drug cartels will continue to be able to smuggle large amounts of cocaine into the United States and other countries throughout Europe.

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