US drug czar: Cocaine flow through Venezuela grows

By IAN JAMES, Associated Press Writer

Friday, August 22, 2008




(08-22) 14:13 PDT CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) --

The U.S. drug czar appealed to Venezuela's government on Friday to take action against the flourishing flow of cocaine being smuggled through the country.

White House drug czar John Walters told The Associated Press that Venezuela has shown no willingness to cooperate with U.S. officials against drugs.

The flow of Colombian cocaine through Venezuela has quadrupled since 2004, reaching an estimated 282 tons (256 metric tons) last year, he said.

"The flow is increasing as dramatically as it is because it is operating in a condition of impunity," Walters told the AP in a phone interview from Washington. "The failure of the Venezuelan government to go after this is a failure to be serious."

Venezuelan officials argue they are taking drug trafficking seriously and point to large seizures in recent years. President Hugo Chavez and his foreign minister, Nicolas Maduro, have suggested they would be willing to work with the U.S. against drugs on terms of mutual respect.

But Walters said his attempt to restart cooperation has been stymied as Venezuelan officials have yet to agree to his request for a meeting, and as a visa request for him and other American officials has been held up for more than a week.

"Frankly, this has gotten to the point where they're playing games," Walters said. "Usually drugs is beyond a lot of other political differences. We have a cooperative relationship with Cuba."

But in Venezuela's case, he said, "there just has been no willingness to establish that cooperation or re-establish a working relationship."

U.S. law enforcement officials have detected repeated flights by planes that leave Venezuela, drop off large loads of cocaine off the island of Hispaniola and return to Venezuela, Walters said. Others multi-ton loads are moving, largely by ship by also by flights, from Venezuela to west Africa — a way station for shipments to Europe.

In the latest bust, Dutch and U.S. officials said Friday that the Dutch Navy and a squad of U.S. Coast Guard raiders seized 4.6 tons (4,200 kilograms) of cocaine from a Panamanian-flagged freighter that had set sail from Venezuela.

The Dutch Navy said it is the largest haul of cocaine it has ever intercepted.

"The government needs to do something. It doesn't have to have a meeting with me," Walters said. "Somebody has to act against this threat."

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