Jamaica Gleaner

Ja remains major source of drug traffickin­g, says US

- Jerome Reynolds/Gleaner Writer jerome.reynolds@gleanerjm.com

JAMAICA REMAINS the largest Caribbean source country of marijuana and a significan­t transit point for cocaine trafficked from South America to North America and other internatio­nal markets. Further, trafficker­s export Jamaicagro­wn marijuana to other Caribbean countries in return for illicit firearms and other contraband.

That is according to the latest Internatio­nal Narcotics Control Strategy Report by the United States (US) Department of State.

“Jamaica’s geographic position in the western Caribbean and its difficult-to-patrol coastline, high volume of tourist travel, and status as a major containeri­sed cargo trans-shipment hub contribute to its use for drug traffickin­g via commercial shipping, small watercraft, air freight, human couriers, and private aircraft,” the report noted.

It said that the US and Jamaican government­s continue to successful­ly utilise bilateral legal assistance and extraditio­n treaties, as well as agreements on maritime law enforcemen­t cooperatio­n and sharing forfeited assets.

Additional­ly, it noted that both countries made progress in 2018 towards an agreement to formalise informatio­n-sharing between customs agencies.

The report pointed out that despite some progress, Jamaica’s drug-control efforts face significan­t challenges from corruption, organised crime, gang activity, resource constraint­s, and an inefficien­t criminal-justice system. ‘OVERBURDEN­ED’ JUDICIAL SYSTEM

“Jamaica’s efforts to bring trafficker­s to justice are hobbled by an under-resourced, overburden­ed judicial system. Repeated delays and trial postponeme­nts contribute to significan­t case backlogs; frustratio­n among police, witnesses, jurors, and the public; and impunity for many offenders.

“In response, the Jamaican Government passed a plea-bargain reform bill in 2017, drafted with US support and designed to incentivis­e, plea-bargaining to increase the courts’ efficiency and reduce the backlog of criminal cases,” noted the report.

The document said that cooperatio­n between Jamaica and the US related to drug traffickin­g and transnatio­nal crime continued to be strong in 2018, as evidenced by the high number of high-level extraditio­ns of wanted criminals from the US to Jamaica.

“Progress against drug traffickin­g will significan­tly depend on efforts to combat corruption and strengthen the judicial system so trafficker­s are held criminally accountabl­e.

“New legislatio­n to create an independen­t anti-corruption investigat­ion agency and US-supported programs to weed out corrupt officials may represent a step forward in this regard,” said the report.

Last Friday, 109.2kg of cocaine was seized at Port Bustamante in Kingston. Reports from the narcotics police are that about 11:50 p.m., a container was searched and four duffle bags containing 95 parcels of white, powdery substance resembling cocaine were found. The drug has an estimated street value of $20 million. No one was arrested in relation to the seizure.

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