News (Media Awareness Project) - South Africa: SA Is 'Top Drug Smuggling Base' |
Title: | South Africa: SA Is 'Top Drug Smuggling Base' |
Published On: | 2000-02-18 |
Source: | The Mail & Guardian (South Africa) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-05 02:53:53 |
SA IS 'TOP DRUG SMUGGLING BASE'
Government plans to stiffen immigration legislation follow warnings by
Western intelligence services that illegal immigrants have turned
South Africa into a top drug conduit.
HE British intelligence service, MI5, has singled out South Africa as
one of the "most important" conduits for South American drugs into
Western Europe in a confidential report submitted to the British
Foreign Office and handed to the South African police.
The report, submitted late last year, suggests that poor border
controls and the rapid increase of illegal immigrants -- especially
Nigerians -- have catapulted South Africa to the top of the
drug-peddling world. Senior South African police sources said this
week the British report is based on intelligence sources as well as
extensive interviews with convicted drug smugglers arrested in Britain
en route from South Africa.
The proposed new laws will give police and the Department of Home
Affairs powers similar to the United States Immigration and
Naturalisation Service. Authorities will be able to raid premises
looking for illegal aliens, and the deportation of aliens involved in
crime will be streamlined in order to crack down on foreign career
criminals.
"We regard South Africa as a country which we would expect to find
South American cocaine coming from," says Ranald MacDonald, chief
press officer for Her Majesty's Customs and Excise department.
Since around 1994 British customs have discovered that increasingly
large quantities of narcotics are finding their way into Britain and
other parts of Europe via South Africa. Officials say South Africa is
being used as a conduit as the smugglers feel that goods emanating
from South Africa are less likely to be searched than goods from
Nigeria or other traditional West African ports used by smugglers.
Top sources in the police said this week that for some time Western
intelligence agencies have been warning the South African police that
poor border controls are encouraging major drug cartels, including the
feared Colombian Cali cartel, to move their bases to South Africa.
The sources, who did not want to be named, said that the proposed new
Bill regulating illegal aliens was apparently inspired by the huge
number of complaints the government has been receiving from
intelligence agencies about unchecked drug and arms smuggling.
South Africa has among the most porous borders in the world. There are
350 registered airports, but police are only deployed at four of them.
Only three policemen cover 100km of the Mozambique/KwaZulu-Natal
border, a hotbed of gun-running and Mandrax smuggling.
According to latest police statistics, 15% of all serious crimes in
South Africa are committed by illegal aliens. The police organised
crime unit told the Mail & Guardian this week it calculates that
nearly 90% of the local cocaine trade is controlled by Nigerian
illegal immigrants.
Intelligence sources say the majority of the Nigerian drug peddlers
who make their way to South Africa do so on the pretext of securing
refugee status. The Department of Home Affairs could not tell the M&G
exactly how many Nigerians had applied for refugee status, but
confirmed the figure runs into thousands. Each applicant is entitled
to a formal hearing to put his or her case, and until that hearing,
refugees are given temporary political refugee status, allowing them
full rights to work and study in South Africa. Until the middle of
last year, fewer than 10 Nigerians had been found to be genuine
political refugees.
Smuggling has increased on a huge scale in South Africa since
democracy, according to a South African Revenue Service (SARS) study
which blames porous borders and the free movement of illegal aliens.
SARS representative Christo Henning told the M&G: "We have started to
take steps, serious steps, to curb smuggling. To this end we have
formed multi-disciplinary teams with the police who go after illegal
goods as well as home affairs who take care of the illegal aliens."
The US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) told the M&G that, while
South Africa is not a conduit for drugs into the US, it is well known
that South American syndicates -- and their Nigerian allies -- are
setting up shop in South Africa. The DEA said the conduit for much of
the narcotics intended for Europe is likely to be South Africa.
Government plans to stiffen immigration legislation follow warnings by
Western intelligence services that illegal immigrants have turned
South Africa into a top drug conduit.
HE British intelligence service, MI5, has singled out South Africa as
one of the "most important" conduits for South American drugs into
Western Europe in a confidential report submitted to the British
Foreign Office and handed to the South African police.
The report, submitted late last year, suggests that poor border
controls and the rapid increase of illegal immigrants -- especially
Nigerians -- have catapulted South Africa to the top of the
drug-peddling world. Senior South African police sources said this
week the British report is based on intelligence sources as well as
extensive interviews with convicted drug smugglers arrested in Britain
en route from South Africa.
The proposed new laws will give police and the Department of Home
Affairs powers similar to the United States Immigration and
Naturalisation Service. Authorities will be able to raid premises
looking for illegal aliens, and the deportation of aliens involved in
crime will be streamlined in order to crack down on foreign career
criminals.
"We regard South Africa as a country which we would expect to find
South American cocaine coming from," says Ranald MacDonald, chief
press officer for Her Majesty's Customs and Excise department.
Since around 1994 British customs have discovered that increasingly
large quantities of narcotics are finding their way into Britain and
other parts of Europe via South Africa. Officials say South Africa is
being used as a conduit as the smugglers feel that goods emanating
from South Africa are less likely to be searched than goods from
Nigeria or other traditional West African ports used by smugglers.
Top sources in the police said this week that for some time Western
intelligence agencies have been warning the South African police that
poor border controls are encouraging major drug cartels, including the
feared Colombian Cali cartel, to move their bases to South Africa.
The sources, who did not want to be named, said that the proposed new
Bill regulating illegal aliens was apparently inspired by the huge
number of complaints the government has been receiving from
intelligence agencies about unchecked drug and arms smuggling.
South Africa has among the most porous borders in the world. There are
350 registered airports, but police are only deployed at four of them.
Only three policemen cover 100km of the Mozambique/KwaZulu-Natal
border, a hotbed of gun-running and Mandrax smuggling.
According to latest police statistics, 15% of all serious crimes in
South Africa are committed by illegal aliens. The police organised
crime unit told the Mail & Guardian this week it calculates that
nearly 90% of the local cocaine trade is controlled by Nigerian
illegal immigrants.
Intelligence sources say the majority of the Nigerian drug peddlers
who make their way to South Africa do so on the pretext of securing
refugee status. The Department of Home Affairs could not tell the M&G
exactly how many Nigerians had applied for refugee status, but
confirmed the figure runs into thousands. Each applicant is entitled
to a formal hearing to put his or her case, and until that hearing,
refugees are given temporary political refugee status, allowing them
full rights to work and study in South Africa. Until the middle of
last year, fewer than 10 Nigerians had been found to be genuine
political refugees.
Smuggling has increased on a huge scale in South Africa since
democracy, according to a South African Revenue Service (SARS) study
which blames porous borders and the free movement of illegal aliens.
SARS representative Christo Henning told the M&G: "We have started to
take steps, serious steps, to curb smuggling. To this end we have
formed multi-disciplinary teams with the police who go after illegal
goods as well as home affairs who take care of the illegal aliens."
The US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) told the M&G that, while
South Africa is not a conduit for drugs into the US, it is well known
that South American syndicates -- and their Nigerian allies -- are
setting up shop in South Africa. The DEA said the conduit for much of
the narcotics intended for Europe is likely to be South Africa.
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