News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: B.C. Has Become 'Safe Place' For Drug Trafficking |
Title: | CN BC: B.C. Has Become 'Safe Place' For Drug Trafficking |
Published On: | 2009-03-16 |
Source: | Globe and Mail (Canada) |
Fetched On: | 2009-03-17 00:04:38 |
B.C. HAS BECOME 'SAFE PLACE' FOR DRUG TRAFFICKING
Expert Attributes Booming Trade To Proximity To U.S. Border And More
Laid-Back Mindset
VANCOUVER (CP) -- A laid-back attitude towards drug use, easy access
over a largely unsecured U.S. border and a vast backcountry with a
climate ripe for growing the potent marijuana known around the world
as B.C. bud. It's little wonder British Columbia has become the
centre of Canada's illicit drug trade and, along with it, a focal
point for gangs that are currently fighting a bloody war on
Vancouver-area streets to control the lucrative enterprise.
There have been three dozen shootings since late January, leaving 16
people dead. Police have linked the majority to gangs, drugs and
people "known to police."
"The Lower Mainland area, Metro Vancouver, has become a safe place in
which to grow and produce a variety of drugs," says Rob Gordon,
director of the criminology school at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, B.C.
"It's a combination of our geography, a somewhat more laid-back
approach to drugs and drug use, and the proximity to the border, easy
export routes primarily to the United States - I can't think of any
other city in Canada that shares those characteristics."
Drug use forms part of how outsiders view life in the region -- from
the cliche of the pot-smoking West Coast snowboarder to the drug
addicts of Vancouver's troubled Downtown Eastside. Various estimates
of B.C.'s drug trade put its value in the billions of dollars, with
thousands of grow operations.
But nearly all of those drugs are connected to the province's roughly
130 gangs. Gangs with guns. Gangs who fight turf wars. "You're always
going to have violence in some fashion when you have groups that are
profiting illegally from drug trafficking, because there's money to
be made there and there's territory that needs to be forcibly kept,"
says Superintendent Dan Malo, head of the province's Integrated Gang
Task Force. "Once they have the territory, it's not a deed. Every day
there's somebody trying to take that away from you."
Police have been vague about what exactly is behind the latest wave
of violence in Vancouver and surrounding communities.
Supt. Malo says much of the fighting can be linked to disputes among
several main groups, notably the United Nations Gang, the Independent
Soldiers and the Red Scorpions.
But he says smaller, largely unrelated rivalries appear to have
boiled over at the same time, creating the impression that all of the
shootings are part of the same battle.
"It is really the perfect storm in a lot of ways," he says. "The
timing is somewhat coincidental. The conflicts are separate from each other."
The shootings have left many residents on edge, calling police
whenever they hear the blare of sirens.
Politicians have promised extra cops and tougher laws for
gang-related crimes, and police have held news conferences to
highlight arrests and play show-and-tell with the arsenals of guns
they've collected.
Vancouver's mayor has offered his own blunt assessment: Police are
fighting a losing battle. And while they highlight successes, even
police view the problem in almost prophetic terms: It has happened
before, and it will happen again.
"I think we'd be naive to think otherwise - I don't think we're going
to be out of a job in that sense," says Supt. Malo, who was appointed
to the gang task force last year. "The next trend will come, it's
just how far back we can push it."
The last major spike in gang violence happened in the fall of 2007
with a rash of shootings and more than 10 killings, including the
discovery of six bodies in a Surrey apartment. Two of the men found
dead were innocent bystanders.
Expert Attributes Booming Trade To Proximity To U.S. Border And More
Laid-Back Mindset
VANCOUVER (CP) -- A laid-back attitude towards drug use, easy access
over a largely unsecured U.S. border and a vast backcountry with a
climate ripe for growing the potent marijuana known around the world
as B.C. bud. It's little wonder British Columbia has become the
centre of Canada's illicit drug trade and, along with it, a focal
point for gangs that are currently fighting a bloody war on
Vancouver-area streets to control the lucrative enterprise.
There have been three dozen shootings since late January, leaving 16
people dead. Police have linked the majority to gangs, drugs and
people "known to police."
"The Lower Mainland area, Metro Vancouver, has become a safe place in
which to grow and produce a variety of drugs," says Rob Gordon,
director of the criminology school at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, B.C.
"It's a combination of our geography, a somewhat more laid-back
approach to drugs and drug use, and the proximity to the border, easy
export routes primarily to the United States - I can't think of any
other city in Canada that shares those characteristics."
Drug use forms part of how outsiders view life in the region -- from
the cliche of the pot-smoking West Coast snowboarder to the drug
addicts of Vancouver's troubled Downtown Eastside. Various estimates
of B.C.'s drug trade put its value in the billions of dollars, with
thousands of grow operations.
But nearly all of those drugs are connected to the province's roughly
130 gangs. Gangs with guns. Gangs who fight turf wars. "You're always
going to have violence in some fashion when you have groups that are
profiting illegally from drug trafficking, because there's money to
be made there and there's territory that needs to be forcibly kept,"
says Superintendent Dan Malo, head of the province's Integrated Gang
Task Force. "Once they have the territory, it's not a deed. Every day
there's somebody trying to take that away from you."
Police have been vague about what exactly is behind the latest wave
of violence in Vancouver and surrounding communities.
Supt. Malo says much of the fighting can be linked to disputes among
several main groups, notably the United Nations Gang, the Independent
Soldiers and the Red Scorpions.
But he says smaller, largely unrelated rivalries appear to have
boiled over at the same time, creating the impression that all of the
shootings are part of the same battle.
"It is really the perfect storm in a lot of ways," he says. "The
timing is somewhat coincidental. The conflicts are separate from each other."
The shootings have left many residents on edge, calling police
whenever they hear the blare of sirens.
Politicians have promised extra cops and tougher laws for
gang-related crimes, and police have held news conferences to
highlight arrests and play show-and-tell with the arsenals of guns
they've collected.
Vancouver's mayor has offered his own blunt assessment: Police are
fighting a losing battle. And while they highlight successes, even
police view the problem in almost prophetic terms: It has happened
before, and it will happen again.
"I think we'd be naive to think otherwise - I don't think we're going
to be out of a job in that sense," says Supt. Malo, who was appointed
to the gang task force last year. "The next trend will come, it's
just how far back we can push it."
The last major spike in gang violence happened in the fall of 2007
with a rash of shootings and more than 10 killings, including the
discovery of six bodies in a Surrey apartment. Two of the men found
dead were innocent bystanders.
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