JPRS ID: 10441 WORLDWIDE REPORT NARCOTICS AND DANGEROUS DRUGS

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CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3
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98
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APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2447/02/09: CIA-RDP82-44850R444544454417-3 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY JPRS L/ 10441 - 9 April 1982 ~ Worldwide Re ort p NARCOTICS AND DANGEROUS DRUGS CFOUO ~ 6/$2) , FBIS FOREIGN BROADCAST INFORMATION SERVICE FOR O~FICIAL USE ONLY i I APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2447/02/09: CIA-RDP82-44850R444544454417-3 NOTE JPRS publications contain information primarily from foreign newspapers, periodicals and books, but also from news agency transmissions and broadcasts. Materials from foreign-language sources are translated; those from English-language sources are transcribed or reprinted, with the original phrasing and other characteristics retained. Headlines, e~litorial reports, and material enclosed in brackets are supplied by JPRS. Processing indicators such as [Text] or [Excerpt] in the first line of each item, or following the last line of a brief, indicate how the original information was processed. Where no processing indicator is given, Che infor- mation was summarized or extracted. ' Unfamiliar names rendered phonetically or transliterated are enclosed in parentheses. Words or names preceded by a ques- tion mark and enclosed in parentheses were not clear in the original but have been supplied as appropriate in context. Other unattributed parenthetical notes with in the body of an item originate with the source. Times within items are as given by source. The contents oi this publication in no way represent the poli- cies, views or attitudes of the U.S. Government. COPYRIGHT LAWS AND REGUI.ATIONS GOVERNING OWNERSHIP OF MATERIALS REPRUDUCED HEREIN REQUIRE THAT DISSEMINATION OF THIS PUBLICATION BE kESTRICTED FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY. APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02109: CIA-RDP82-00850R400540050017-3 I FOR OFFICJAL USE ONLY i JPRS L/10441 ~ 9 April 1982 I ~ 1 f WORLDWIDE REPORT ~ NA~COTICS AND DANGEROUS DRUGS ~ - (~ouo 16/82) ~ CONTENTS ASIA ' AUSTRALIA Rep ort Proposes Secret Phone Taps on Drug Dealera (Stephen Mills; THE AGE, 2 Feb 82) 1 Briefs Sydney Hashieh Seizure 2 _ Opposition to Marijuana Legalization 2 BURMA Opium, Carrier ~eized on Lashio Train (MYANMA ALIN, 2 Feb 82) 3 MALAYSIA = Narc otica Arrests, Seizures in January 1981 (NEW STRAITS TIMES, 23 Feb 82) 4 Cus tom Officers Seize Raw Heroin (NEW STRAITS TIMES, 20 Feb 82) 5 PHILIPPINES Briefs Marijuana Farm Destroyed ( SINGAPORE Briefe . Fight Against Drug Use 7 ~ . ~ ~ -a- [III -~1� 138FOUO] ~ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 THAILAND I~hun SA Sends Letters to Prem, Other Officials (MATICHON, 12 Mar 82) 8 Amphetamine Use Said To Be Growing (BAN *NANG, 20 Jan 82) 9 Heroin Smuggler, Hired by Malaysian, Arreated (TAWAN SIAM, 1 Jan 82) 10 Hong Kong Man Arrested With Heroin (NATION REVIEW, 9 Feb 82) 11 - Columnist Blasta Effectiveness of Anti-Sua Raid (Tabi Chaophraya; DAO ST;~M, 9 Feb 82) 12 Marihuan.~. Seized in Chachoengsao (DAO SIAAIrii, 14 Feb 82) 14 Irregular Troopa Said To Be Misuaed in Ban Hin Taek Raid _ (MATICHON, 7 Feb 82) 15 - Briefs _ Drug Seminar 17 CANADA Conviction for Cocaine, Marijuana Trafficking (Gary Rennie; THE WIDTDSOR STAR, 26 Feb 82) 18 Man Jailed on Drug Charges i~alled Major Niagara Seller (THE GLOBE AND MAIL, WEEKEND EDITION, 6 Feb 82) 20 Five Imprisoned for Narcotics Trafficking (THE SATURDAY WINDSOR ~TAR, 27 Feb 82) 21 Briefs Heroin Seized 22 Druga Spur Crime r~Jave 22 LATIN AMERICA ARGENTINA Briefs Addicts Arrested 23 Traffickera Arrested 23 Traffickers Killed, Arreated 23 -b- FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000504050017-3 BOLIVIA ~ Briefs Traffickers Escape Prison 24 Cocaine Factory Dismantled 24 Officer Diacharged for Trafficking 24 Official Convicted on Drug Trafficking 24 BRAZIL Briefs Cocaine Seized 25 COLOMBIA Mexican Cocaine Dealer Achieves Freedom (EL TIEMPO, 28 Feb 82) 26 Briefs Marihuana Seized in Cesar 29 MEXICO Smugglers of Electronic Good: Captured With Cocaine (EL MANANA, 18 Feb 82) 30 Briefs Heroin Ring Suspects Arrested 32 Marihuana Shipment Seized 32 Nine Drug Plantations Destroyed 33 - Customs Guard, Trafficker Killed 33 Marihuana Traffickers Jailed 33 - PANAMA Routes, Methoda of Colombian Cocaine Traffickers Discussed (John Alius; 0 ESTADO DE SAO PAULO, 7 Mar 82) 35 NEAR EAST AND NORTH AFRICA' IRAN ~ Briefs Quchan Drug Seizure 43 Torbat-e Jam Opium Seizure 43 Neyshabur Opium Seizure 43 Tehran Drug Seizures 43 - Drugs Seized in Nehavand 43 Opium Seized in Darreh t~az 43 Opium Seizure in Sara:chs 43 -c- FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R040500050017-3 Hamadan Heroin Seizure 44 Shiraz Opium Trafficking 44 Bostanabad dpium Seizure 44 Opium Discovery in Sabzvar 44 Esfahan Drug Discovery 44 Opium Seized in 'Aligudarz 44 - Shirvan Qpium Diacovery 44 Opium Seized ir, Chabukear 44 Fara Drug Seizure 44 Massive Drug Swoop 44 Hamedan Heroin Haul 45 Mashhad Opium Seizure 45 Smugglera Arreated 45 Huge Drug Haul 45 , Gun, Heroin Seized 45 Opium Seizure 45 Fars Drug Haul 45 SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA SOUTH AFRICA Briefs Warning on Druga 46 WEST EUROPE AUSTRIA ~ Three Nigerians Sentenced for Smuggling Marihuana (WIENER ZEITUNG, 23 Feb 82) 47 BELGIUM Netherlander Held for Smuggling Hashish, Arma (DE STANDAARD, 18 Feb 82) 48 CYPRUS ~ Briefs Narcotics in Famagusta 50 DENMARK Interior Miniater Would Prohibi.t Growing of Hemp Plants (BERLINGSKE TIDENDE, 19 Mar 82) 51 Death-Dealing Heroin Seized by Police in CoFc~inagen (BERLINGSKE TIDENDE, 18 Mar 82) 52 - d - FOR OFFIC1aL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 FOR O~FICIAL USE ONLY Official: Sixteen Tons of Methadone Used Anually by Addicts (Ih'FORMATION, 23 Feb 82) 53 I~ Danieh, Norwegian Police: Over a Ton of Hashish From Nepal (Helge Aamotsbakken; ARBEIDERBLADET, 3 Mar 82) 55 Welfare Director: Stop Unemployment, Disability Aid to Users ~ (BERLINGSYtE TIbENDE, 16 Mar 82) 56 Fulketing Majority Prevents Action To Close Christiania (BERLINGSKE TIDENDE, 17 Mar 82) 57 Reporter Visits Christiania, Finds Hashiah Sold Openly (Henrik Grunnet; BERLINGSKE TIDENDE, 16 Mar 82) 59 Police Assert Christiania ls Denmark's Hashish Center (Anders Wiig; BERLINGSKE TIDENDE, 7 Mar 82) 63 FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY Leader of Frankfurt Drug Ring Goes on Trial (DER SPIEGEL, 1 Mar 82) 65 ITALY . Italy's Growing Role in Narcotica Reported (ANSA, 15 Mar 82) 69 NORWAY Physician Sees Increasing Brutality in Drug Environment (Jan 0. Helgesen; ARBETDERBLADET, 2 Mar 82) 70 SWEDEN Narcotics Police Methods Described (Leif Dahlin; DAGENS NYHETER, 27 Feb 82) 72 National Police Chief Defends Use of Drug Gang Infiltratora (Bo G. Andersson, Cecilia Steen-Johnsaon; DAGENS NYHETER, - 27 Feb 82) 75 Danes Protest Swedes' Leaking of News on Gang Infiltration , (DAGENS NYHETER, 27 Feb 82) 78 Minister Promises Tougher Prison Regimen for Drug Convicts (Willy Silberstein; SVENSKA DAGBLADET, 22 Feb 82) 80 Dutch Truck Driver Smuggles 42 Kilograms of Hashiah (Claes von Hofaten; SVLNSKA DAGBLADET, 17 Feb $2) 83 ~ - e - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000504050017-3 UNITED KINGDOM Commentary Notea Use of Drugs by Middle Claes (Roderick Junor; THE DAILY TELEGRAPH, 2 Mar 82) 85 Home Office Notes Inc:ease in Number of Drug Addicts _ (David Fletcher; THE DAILY TELEGRAPH, 24 Feb 82) 87 - Drug Smuggler Marks Jailed for Three Years _ (Ian Henry; THE DAILY TELEGRAPH, 17 Feb 82) 88 Court Hears Police 'Turned Blind Eye' on Drug Ring Couple (THE DAILY TELEGRAPH, 20 Feb 82) 90 - f - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2447/02/09: CIA-RDP82-44850R444544454417-3 AUSTRALIA REPORT PROPOSES SECRET PHONE TAPS ON DRUG DEALERS Melbourne THE AGE in English 2 Feb 82 p 1 ~Article by Stephen Mills~ ~Text~ - CANBERRA. -'A specfa3 teIIigence work relating to druB pects who believed that ti~eir Scotland Yard iavestiga~ion of offenders - the colt~tion, avalus- gh~~ wese being t~pp~. the AuStralian Federal Palice uon ~~or- 9ir C~tin rejected the g~8g~' has reoommended a strict pn-. ~0~ tion that Folice migi~t develop a licy df secreCy a'bout the T~ P�licy of noa-disclo- ~v~ to phone tapping force's new ~owers to tap �sure a! t~lephone tapping is bes- ~g t~ey were not requ,ired w � tel~ ones df ected dru ~ on Che beli~ t3aat presp,rtting produce t~e transcripts m courc. ~ ~P 8 xranscripts of phone conversetions for tele~phone o~ffettt~et's� to a court can lead to the hearing ~~d .be refused if police The recommendation, which has becoming bogged down in irrele- g~j~ tti ~e Qalid use af them. b~ren alccepted by R'he Fedeea7 Pa vancies. Poltce cia~ms on tl~ iden- ~e ~d, then has 1Yoe Ca~io~r, Sir Col~n tity of voices on tapes are regu- yp~ ~~ab~ity, wha w~s~ larly challen~ged in court. ~ g~s a w~eek, oaee a gainetd from pho~ne t~ vvnu9d uot Si~ CoTin told '1fie Age' that ~~~y, g~ y~m, ~ be presenRed is ao~ur~. I~itea~d, it presenting transcripts to a, court ~f~ ~nL~~ wi4l be used ~ry politie far a~- could kad to a leg; .1 prab~ng of Sir Colin sedd he ~vss a"S~t t - telligence purposes to help crack the whole systecn o~ gaining the. believer" W. revevin6 the num- drug rin~s. information> leadfiB. . in tl~rn, ta ber et telephone taPs ins6ituttd Narcatics oHicers af the Aus- ~s~e ~ police intelligeace s~nd ~~e fo~, ~gut the lesy tralian Federal Police gained the ~pra~ers. . }~qgbtened perc~eption 1her4 Is ~n power to tapp~ ones in 1979 and 5ir Colin ~aid that Superinten� v;arld sbout the (tele- began. surveiltance in 1980. De- dent HemingwaY had aL~o g~ven one mterceP'ts. the ~PPier I - tertive Chief Su~erin~'~end~etYt A,I- ~ ~ ~ ~ernon Hemingway was second~d us~~ ~~ce a~bout handling in~ ~n be,� he ~id. forma.wn ' once it had b~en re- ~ast year from Scotland Yarn to Superintendent eminBwaY ceived from tdephone taps, cov- advise on the most up-to-date~ also recommended tk~at: methods of employin the nea ering sec~sity of tha ~t~~~ ' ~ police shoald not be requ4red . powers. Superintenden Heming� ~CO~s ~'0 ~~'~~;~tl�n to attend ceurt v~hen Che ac- way submited a 140-pege repart ~~~'~on for tlu sltarP ~used had plgaded~ guilty; to Sir Colin over C6nstmaa aPter ~�~st;0� ~ Time-savmg charge sheets a six-month imes�igation. tecti~ro wovk. Il~e 8ad Pr~~ and crime ofience reports be He was also aeked to report oa ths b~e~t a~ B~itish e~cP~~nce used. oa esusctin~ t~b~e de.~ 'Fhe Admin;strative Services ways oS streamlining the Austra= uaed sus- lian Fe~ideral Pplice's criminal in- ~~~0�� Mimsur. Mr Newman, is study- in~ t?ie report CSO: 5300/7537 1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 AUSTRALIA BRIEFS SYLNEY HASHISH SEIZURE--Customs officials and federal policy in Sydney have seized !nore than 2 tons o� high grade hashish--the largest haul ever detected in Australia. The hashish was seized after a aearch of a container aboard a ship containing Middle East foodstuffs. The business and consumer affairs minister, Mr Morre, said in Canberra, the ship f irst arrived fn Melbourne from Marseilles but was then redirected to Sydney. He said the high quality hashish was individually wra~pped in calica cloth and stamped with a trade mark. [Text] [BK260202 Meibozrne Overseas Service in English 0830 GMT 24 Mar 82 BK] - OPPOSITION TO MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION--Australiart police commissioners have come strongly against any moves to make the use of mari~uana legal. The commissioners, who have been meeting in Canberra, say they did not endorse the decriminalization of the drug. They say a recent discussion paper by the Australian focndation of alcoholism and drug dependence on mari3uana lacks conclusivp data on the long-term effects of using it. There has been an increasing debate by prominent Australians recently on changing~the laws relating to Mari~uana. [Text] [BK260202 Melbourne Overseas Service in English 0830 ~'MT 23 Mar 82 BK] CSO: 5300/5688 9 ' 2 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 BU RMA OPIUM, CARRIER SEIZED ON LASHIO TRA~N Rangoon MYANMA AI.IV in Burmese 2 Feb 82 p 1 [Text] At 1000 on 22 January, acting on information, a Lashio railways police squad headed by Ko Sein Maung and Ko Ko Aye searched passenger car- riage No 4 of the Last~io-Mandalay train as the train entered Hsipaw stati~n. 'L't~e team found from Nan Mya U of Shwe Chedi Ward No 8, Kyaukme, six balls of raw opium, weighing 6 viss [about 22 pounds] and worth about 20,000 kyat, li-idden among the vacuum flasks in a rattan bag together with other contra- band goods. 6~ ~ c` . ~ [Photo caption] Nan Mya U of Kyaukme seen together with 6 balls of raw opium seized from her on Lashio-Mandalay train at Hsipaw station on 22 January. CSO: 5300/4926 " 3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R400540050017-3 i MALAYSIA . NARCOTICS ARRESTS, SEIZURES IN JANUARY 1981 Kuala Iumpur NEW STRAITS TIMES in English 23 Feb 82 p 19 [Text] KUAL.A LUMPUR, Mon. The following day, pc~- an unknown pcrson. Ya- . - Three Singaporcane ltce in Penang acting om ~~ce wafted in ambuah but and a Thal .wcre among iniormatlon etopped si no onc camc to take thc 82! peoplc arrealed for man at the ietty an~i g~i~ drugoftencea in January. aelzed a briefcaee. In thc On Jan. 31 pollce OL the total arreste, 19 ~g~ae bottom of the bsg� raided a houae tn Jalan were tor drug trat[Icking thcy found !.7 kg of hero- Dellma hcre and de- and 21 for puehing, CID in number 8. talned two youtha and Dlrector Datuk Abdul In tollow-up opera- aeized S2b atlcks of gania Aahman Iamall sald to- Uona, tour more people daY� wcre arreated. He eaidpo Iice carricd On dan. s, pollce out Is7 raldr and 58! aur- atopped thrae mon at Ta- prlae checka. i man Tun Abdul . Razak Datuk Abdu~ Rahman hcre and aelaed 19 stleke eaid that except for raw at ganja. In a plaatic bag optum, there was an in- police foand another creaae 1n the ~aefaurc of three bundlea of ganja other typee of ~lruge. wclghing 868 gm. Briefc~se On Jan. a, 8 c~~ W~ atopped at 3lmpang Tlga in Jitra and two men � About 9 k~ of raw ~ycrc detatned. Atter oplum, i.d kg prepared aearching the tax! 600 gm opium, 6.2 kg ot hcroin, ~t gan~a were found. ' and 9.9 kg ot ~anja wcrc Then on Jan. 18, police aeized. detained a woman and On Jan.1, pollce raided her son when they found ' a houae 1n Jalan Kem in 100 aticka of ganja 1n Port Klang and arreated their food etall. - four men. They aearched On Jan. 28, at Jalan - the houee and aelzed 757 R.aia Bot here, police atlcke of gania found S kg ot gan ja left by CSO: 5300/8321 4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000540050017-3 MP,LAY S IA CUSTOM OFFIC~RS S~IZE RAW F1ER~IN. Kuala Iumpur NEW STRAITS TI~1~S in English 20 Feb 82 p 1 [Text] IPO~I, Fri. - i;ustoms ofticers yes� Wan Yeop Abdul Shukor~ said th~ tcrday sciz~d 1,000 ~m ot hiqh� ambuqt~ was I~id on n house near a qrade rsaw hcrofn, worth about ~1 mosque s?bout 5 nm by a nine-man amb gh on 111 ~u5e~fn~Sunqel Bak- oms Supl ~ChrngeKan~ Lamr Cus- 1p~ P~ovincc Welletil~y. Aboat 9.40 am, a Honda Accord Thc housc Is bclicved to have bearin~ 1'en:~n~ rcgist~ratlon been used as a trs~nsit polnL for 'p~atea, drovo into Sungef Bakap druRs smu~~led fn (rom north� Town Irom lhc north. It turned Into wcst Th:?il:~nd'a'(aolden Trlangle'. emall Inno IcsldinR to the houee. - A 40-yc:~r�old guspect from A Customs' car tollowed~ and Province Wclicsley 1nd a Honda oificers at olher stations closed in. Accord ca,r were det:tiined. ' When thc car stopped In tront of The seizarc, thc bi~~est by the the house, the driver was ap~ Customs hcre so L�?r this ycar, was ~Irehendcd by Customs otflccrs S. thc result of two months ot in� "~unusamy and Sharifuddln bin vestigaeions on lhc :tictivitles ot a Mohamed Yusott. local drug syndicatc belicved to be ' "Thelr action was so qulek~ the based in Provincc Wcllesley. driver did not even have tlme'to The seized hcroln is capable ot untasten his scat belt " said HaJi being convcrled lnto 200,000 shots. Wan Ycop. A shot, at prev:Liling slreet price, The drivcr threw out a~ package costs about ~f. trom the car which was found to Perak Cutito~nti Dircetor, H1ji contain the high-~rade raw heroin. CSO: 5300/8321 5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2407/42/09: CIA-RDP82-40850R000500450017-3 ~ PHILIPPINES BRIEFS - MARIJUANA FARM DESTROYED--Tinglay3n, Kalinga-Apayao--The government has found a vast mari3uana plantation in this mo~ntain area run bq armed regulars of the New People's Arnry. Believed to be a source of funds of rebels for buying arms, the farm eluded detection for many monthe as it was hidden in thickly forested hills. When raided by the elements of the armed forces' Northern Command six NPA members were still tending the farm. Also found in the plantation was a 20-bed rebel hos- pital stocked with assort~d medical supglies and preserved food. The marijuana farmers who were captured told investigators they had been operating the planta- tion to help shore un NPA financea. Brig. Gen. Romeo Gatan, Northcom commander, said about 30,000 marijuana plants worth P6 million were uprooted and burned by the troopers. The farmers also admitted that a good part of their earnings were used in buying guns. According to intelligence agents, the mari3uana is sold in school campuses and some urban villages. Military regional commar:u~ra told Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile and Gen. Fabian C. Ver, AFP chief of etaff, that the 10 bulldozers aeized by rebels last week in Pamplona, Kalinga-Apayao, were recovered yesterday by government troopers after a fierce gunbattle. Some 30 rebels guarded the heavy equipment, the regional commanders said. The dissidents earlier demanded a P500,000 ransom for the return of the bulldozers taken from the Pamplona Redwood Veneer Enterprises. 'I'he regional military command said no ransom was paid. The troopers said the dissidents, who withdrew after engaging troop enfarcements in a one-hour firefight, were armed with armalites and other assorted guns. [Text] [Manila PHILIPPINES DAILY EXPRESS in English 13 Mar 82 pp 1, 2] CSO: 5300/4929 6 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 SINGAPORE BRIEFS - FIGHT AGAINST DRUG USE--T.he minister of state for law and home affairs told Parliament that the measures adopted by the government to combat drug addic- tion and drug trafficking in Singapore have met with cons~.derable success. It was estimated that the addicted population had dropped from 1:~,000 in _ 1977 to 6,100 last year. Betweer~ 1976 and 1978, 50 persons were char~ed fnr drug trafficking offenses which c~uld carry the death penalty, but the number dropped to 15 between 1979 and 1981. The prices of drugs on the street had risen as the result from $7 for a 0.2 gram straw of heroin a few years ago to $20 for 0.05 gram of heroin. He said that hardcored addicts remained a problem. [BK260202 Singapore Domestic Service in English 11.00 GI~T 19 Mar 82 BK] CSO: 5300/5688 7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 ~i'ziAILAND - KHUN SA SENDS LETTER~ TO PREM, OTHER OFFICIALS BK120350 Bangkok MATICHUN in~ Thai 12 Mar 82 pp 1, 12 [Excerpt] In his report on 11 March, the MATICHON reporter in Chiang Rai said Khun Sa, leader of the Shan State United Army, whase headquarters at Ban Hin Taek was destroyed by the Thai armed forces in February, has written � letters to several senior Thai officials. Last week he sent more letters to such officials again through local Thai officials in Mae Chan District, _ Chiang Rai. Accordiiig to the reporter, Khun Sa's letters were written in Thai Yai ~ dialect and were addressed to Prime Minister Gen Prem Tinsulanon, Deputy Prime Minister Prachuap Suntharangkun, Director of Army Operations Maj Gen Chawalit Yongchaiyut, Chiang Rai Governor Sakda 0-phong and Public Welfare Department Director General Pramun Chanchamnong. In the letter to Pramun, Khun Sa asked Pramun to deliver a separate letter to the king. = The contents of the letters wF:re similar in that they say that the Thai king is revered as the king of the Thai Yai minority group since the Thai Yai and lowland Thai people are from the same origins. The incident at Ban Hin Taek is over and done and took place as a result of a misunderstanding. The Shan - State United Army holds no grudge over the incident. - The letters say that regarding the Thai Government's allegation that Khun Sa is a narcotics trafficker and that his death or arrest would make opium dis- appear from thp Golden Triangle, Khun Sa is willing to surrender himself to the Thai Government. I~iun Sa also proposes to the Thai Govern~ent that he put the entire Shan State United Army under command of the Thai military in any operation, including operations against the communist terrorists or other minority groups. _ According to the reporter, Khun Sa did not set any conditions on his pro- posal. It is believed, however, that Khun Sa wi11 ask for permission to set up a sanctuary in Thailand like the one he had at Ban Hin Taek. - CSO: 5300/5689 8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000504050017-3 THAILAND .i AMPHETAMINE [tSE SAID TO BE GROWING - Bangkok BAN MUANG in Thai 20 Jan 82 pp 1, 16 - [Article: "Police Asked to Cooperate Tn Order to Quickly Suppress Amphetamines"] [TextJ Dr Sem has admitted that [the use of] amphetamines is spreading seriously. About 99 percent of the truck drivers use these drugs. These drugs are dangerous to the body and mind but they can be purchased easily from drugstores everywhere. On the morning of 19 January, Dr Sem Phringphuangkaeo, the minister of public health, granted an interview before a cabinet meeting. He said that, at present, after people take amphetamines, they feel very alert. This is a very popular type of drug, especially among workers such as 10-wheel truck drivers. It is thought that up to 90 [sic] percent of these drivers take these drugs. ~ At present, these drugs can be purchased very easily at various drugstores. _ Another reason for the popularity of this type of drug is that, at present, there are many factories. In Bangkok alone there are approximately 70 factories that employ approximately 80,000 to 90,000 workers. It is probable that the factory owners or oti~ers bring in these drugs and give them to the workers in order to increase their work performance. The minister of public health emphasized that-amphetam�nes are dangerous to th~~ mental health of the people. He has tried to inform the people of the fact that this type of drug can destroy [a person's] health. During the first 4 hours after ingestion, the person will feel good, but after 8 hours, it will begin to have a bad effect on the body and mind. If a person uses this drug for a long time, he will become addicted. Mr Amnuai Yotsuk, the deputy minister of public health, talked with reporters aUout factories giving the workers amphetamines ?.n order to increase their work performance. He said that he had ordered drug .inspections and officials fram the Department of Health to go inspect the fa~ctories in order to take samples of the food and water and check the urine. If such drugs are being used, it is believed that the factories are in violation of many things, bas:~d on the drug and labor acts. The employers are also at fault. At present, activities are being coordinated with several government units. 11943 CSO: 5300/5666 9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 ; ~ ~ ~ ~i i ~ THAILAND ~ HEF;OIN Srti1GGI,ER, HIRED BY MALAYSIAN, ARRESTED Br~ngkok TAWAN SIAM in Thai 1 Jan 82 p 1 iPhoto caption] ; ~ , i ;=L ~ G 1 I t ~ ~ 'e , ~ ` ~ ~ ~ ,;'r. � � ~ ~a., s:~~;~:.,~ ~.wr~ r ~ _ i,~ t . - r5 ' yA S~ -0. . ~ ~s ' ~ 1!0 ' ~ ~ j j ~ ~ ~ ` - ~ . ' : - . a . ~f'~+ ~ . ~ - ~ 4'~F~';.'~'fi A d..~ . ~ i+' ~ ~ . ~~~w.a.~T ' ,X ~ ~ , , } . ~ ~ :'M � ~ 1 , ti.r�_ � ' `t' ~ . ~ y~~ ~ . ~ ~ , M~ 4 ~f' , J., . ' ~ ' ' ~.j . k j{ 't , . ..,..R...y,,,,. . . sf,'Ht . ~ " ; ~ . - � _ ; f;y,, M:;.. , ~ ~r ~ ' r +~;.r ;r',, ~ ~;F ~ ~y. ~J , i~ ~;~6 71y,�.'' ~r~ N/� ~`I'extl Destructive h~roin: Mr Pitikorn Saetang and the 20 bags of No 3 heroi~~, weie~l~inc~ 9.6 pounds and valued at 80 million baht, that were seized by officials Erc~m th~ Phahoyothin Police Station. He confessed that a Malaysian had hired him to transf~ort the heroin. ]1943 CSO: 5300/5666 10 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000504050017-3 I . THAILAND HONG KONG MAN ARRESTED WITH HEROIN Bangkok NATION REVIEW in English 9 Feb 82 p 3 ['Text ] A HONG Kong�Chtneae man was Batlon by narcottca police of the Chang hae been !lving ln Thalland yesterday apprehended atter CSb After the eelsure of over for 1~! yeara. He eaid: Chang Crime Suppreselon Dlvialon po- aeven kllo~rammea ot hernln and worked in a mining buslneas in lice ralded hls apartment and al- the capture of a Thal. mo4te Ratchaburt for 7 to B yeara and legedly found S.1 kllogrammes of producer and two actteaeea at leter awltched to a roed conatruc- high�grade No ~ heroln. Don Muang Alrpott over a week tlon bualneae. The arreat of Chang Tuk Rung, ago. The heroln waa found In 80 alias Peter, 94, at Chamchan Pol Col Rungroi Yamakul, amall plaatlc bega hidden ln two Court i~ Soi Thoaelor, Sukhumvlt auperlntendent of the Seventh auitcaeea In Chang's room, ~the Road, followed lntenalve investl� Sub~lvlaion of the CSD, epld that pollce colonel alleged: Bwpaot C r. ~.y Rwr~g ta piotw~d wtth a po~tca trwatl~ator and the horotn ollegedly aot#~d ~i~om Cha+i,g'a aPa+'tmont. ' ~ ~ i I . Y . ~ ' `7 .r~. L ~ J i . l~t y~i . . n ~ a s. , , ,e 1 , f.. ' ~ x, t9~.` � `ai c, ' ' r1"'.. r ~ ~ . Sctiia r3 � .:i. t~+`'. . ~ CSO: 530U/4926 11 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2447/02/09: CIA-RDP82-44850R444544454417-3 ~ THAILANC COLUMNIST BLASTS EFFECTIVENESS OF ANTI-SUA RAID Bangkok DAO SIAM in Thai 9 Feb 82 p 5 [Please Wait, Siin column by Tabi Chaophraya: "Thoughts Before Sunrise"] - [Text] The poppies are still dazzling. I think people are correct F~hen they say that even if Khun Sa dies, poppies will never die. It is said that Khun Sa does not grow poppies but purchases raw opium, refines ~ it into heroin and sells it, just like the 93rd Division, which does not grow poppies but makes money by running opium caravans. Even if Khun Sa leaves Thailand, the poppies will still be beautiful and dazzling. About 4 kilometers from Ban Hin Taek in the mountainous terrain, there are still very large areas planted in poppy, just as there is on Doi Mae Salong. In short, on both Doi Mae SaJ.ong and in the mountains about 4 kilometers fYom Ban Hin Taek, on thousands of rai the poppies are blooming dazzingly and waiting for the c3ay that they will turn into dangerous narcotics. This product is produced by the various hill tribe groups that live on almost all the mountains here. Such groups include the Mussah, Ikaw and Lisu. The irregulars [thahan phran) that drove Khun Sa out have confirmed that when they reached this area they smelled the strong smell of this plant. But they were not ordered to destroy the poppies! This may have been becaus,e the various hill tribes make their living growing poppy. That is, another . group was encountered, one that much thought must be given to. This is what Thailand is like! This is our country but others come and settle down here. They (should] not be above the la~~ but it seems like they are. They [should not] have any rights but it seems that they do. ke can only claim this and that. It is even necessary to "accept" them and give them comfort depending on the "reasons." Take the _ case of the United Nations refugees in Thailand, of which (only) 190,000 remain. Mr William Samaiser, the deputy high commissioner for refugees, has said that these refugees should be given Thai citizenship and al~owed to settle down permanently in Thailand. 12 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 They know this is not rigYit. Thail.and is the one who has given these refugees _ a place to stay. But, as everyone knows, the Nobel Prize for Peace was given ' to the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for R~fugees. Yes. Thailand cannot get away from the word "must." We must accept these stateless people for humanitarian reasons and so on. We proba~ly cannot take any strong action against those who come to stay in Thailand for various reasons, and this includes the hill tribes who grow poppies for a living because of the various "reasons." But when everything is added up, it cannot be said that the Thais are the ones who "profit." I am not blaming the Prem government for all these accumulated problenis because the various diseases a_�flicting Thailand are like a chronxc cancer th~n cannot ~ be cured or that have been ignored so long that we are now in a coma. In the report the "Smell of the Poppies," it is well known, isn't it, that 300,000 to 600,000 Thais between the ages of 16 and 24 are slaves to narcotics. They spend approximately 9.8 to 19.7 billion baht a year on drugs. How can ~ we suppress narcotics? Tne only ones we can suppress are the small pushers! ~ Or is there some way to "elin,~~nate the weeds by digging up the roots?" - 11943 CSO: 5300/5666 13 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 THAILANv MARIHUANA SEIZED IN G`HACHOENGSAO Bangkok DAO SIAM in Thai 14 Feb 82 p 16 [Article: "Young Man Transporting 1 Million Baht Worth of Marihuana By Truck to Bangkok [Is Arrested]"] [Text] A DAO SIAM reporter assiqned to Chachoengsao Province has reported ~hat at 2200 hours on 12 February, Police Captain Wattana Charoensak, the _ deputy chief inspector at the Chachoengsao provincial police sta.tion in Bangnam- - prieu District, together with Police Sublieutenant Thirachai~Chinsadathien, the head of the investigation section of the Special Operations Unit, and a force of officials went and inspected an unlicensed 6-wheel Hino truck belonging to Mr Michai Chaiwangsap, age 23, who lives at 128 Village 1, Tharae Commune, Muang District, Sakon Nakhon Province. The zruck was parked in front of a Shell gasoline station opposite the Khlong Chao market along the Chachoengsao- - Minburi highway in Bangnamprieu District, Chachoengsao Province. During their search, the officials found 293 bags of marihuana, each weiqhing 6 kilograms, valued at approximately 1 million baht hidden in the compartment in the rear of the truck. The bags had been covered with bricks to keep them concealed from officials. The officials placed Mr Michai, the driver of the truck, under arrest, seized the marihuana as evidence and turned the suspect and evidence over to Police Sublieutenant Chaiyong Kritsanachinda, the officer on duty at the provincial police station in Bangnamprieu District for further investigation. Mr Michai stated that this marihuana did not belong to him but to Mr Noi (surname unknown), who, he said, had paid him 2,000 baht to transport it to Bangkok. But while Mr Michai was parked in front of the gasoline station waiting for another person t~ come and drive the marihuana the rest _ of the way into Bangkok, the officials came and arrested him. While they were searching the truck of Mr Michai, they noticed two pickup trucks drive up and survey the scene in front of the gasoline station. It is thought that - these pickup trucks were the ones that were to meet the truck of Mr michai but thE two pickup trucks then sped off. After the investigation was completed, the officials placed Mr Michai under arrest for further handling of the case. 11943 - CSO: 5300/5666 14 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 _ THAILAND IRREGULAR TROOPS SAID TO BE MISUSED IN BAN HIN TAEK RAID Bangkok MATICHON in Thai 7 Feb 82 p 6 ~ w [Article: "The Secret 25 Million Baht Operation to Eliminate Khun Sa"] [TextJ "Last October, we received an intelligence report that a large shipment of opium would be transported into Thailand. The gavernment ordered the irregular:. [thahan phran] to intercept this shipment of opium. They did so and were also ab e to destroy three heroin refineries near the border," stated Major General Chaowalit Yongchaiyut, the director of the Directorate of ~Jperations, on the "Conversations About the Country's Problems" program on the evening of 31 January. He stated that in this operation, we lost one lieutenant and six warrant officers. The aim was to draw Khun Sa's forces away to the west so that ths other 32 niembers of the [governnent's) force could escape. MATICHON has, checked the report file and it appears that this is exactly the opposite of what the Information Office of Supreme Command Headquarters reported on 8 October 1981. It reported that soldiers from the Third Army Area clashed with about 700 soldiers of unknown nationality on 7 October in the area of Ko Samakhi Village, which is located along the Thai-Burmese border in Chiang Rai Province. The fight continued through 8 October. 'l~t~l~ty nine irregulars were ordered to go intercept a shipment of opium that - was being guarded by 700 men (accor~ing to estimates of Supreme Command Head- quarters). TY~is does not make sense. First, how could just 39 irregulars engage a drug caravan since each caravan is escorted by hundreds of inen. Second, these irregulars came from the Pak Thongchai camp in Nakhon Ratchasima. Most of them were northeasterners who were unfamiliar with the terrain. And what is important is that intercepting and destroying such caravans is the dt~t.y of the border patrol police. - Thus, there was probably something secret behind the venture of these ~9 - fearless irregulars. 15 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 A high-rankinc~ ne:vs source of the border patrol police told MATICHON that the task of tJiese irregulars was not to intercept the opium shipment but ' rather to kil.l Khun Sa, for whom a 500,000 baht reward has been o�fered. ' Reports have stated that the army's Spscial Operations Center was the unit that coordinated things and formed the force. The government of one great- - power country that has a po]~icy of suppressing narcotics supported this by giving 25 million baht. Of this 25 million baht, 13 million was used to purchase M16s with infrared - [scopes] for the 39 irregulars, who underwent rigorous selection, anc two _ pieces of infrared equipment. As for the remaining 12 million baht, it was used for the "personal expenses" of this unit that was to carry out ~ very risky opera~ion. Each p~rson received an average of approximately 400,000 baht. This small operations unit was led by Lieutenant Athaphon (surname unknown). It was composed nf eight warrant officers and 30 irregulars. This brave unit travellPd from the Pak Thongchai irregular camp in Nakhon Ratchasima to the Pratu Pha camp in Chiang Rai Province at the beginning of October 1981. Then at ~400 hours one morning they were dropped off in the Ban Sansai area, which is approximately 8 kilometers from Mae Sai District. From there, they walked through the jungle into the area of influence of Khun Sa in Burma. They clashed with forces of Khun Sa for the first time in an area about 4 kilometers from the Thai border. The news source stated _ that, during this clash, the irregulars killed 70 of Khun Sa's men when they attacked in the night in order to wipe out the irregulars. After this clash, this brave unit tried to make its way south. It had two more clashes with the forces of Khun Sa at Ban Mussar Puna-Chati. The news source stated that the unit killed about 10~ of Khun Sa's men. This brave unit fled and re-entered Thailand at Ban Aku on 7 October. Forces of Khun Sa were moved in to eliminate it from both Burma and Thailand, that is, from the Ban Hin Taek area. Finding himself in th~s situation,. Lieuter..ant Athaphon ordered his force to disband so that they could escape. ~ A special report in the 8-14 1981 issue of Prachamit on this top secret operation, an operation so secret that even Border Patrol Police Company 508, which is stationed near Ban Hin Taek, did not learn of the operation until after tha clash, said that Border Patrol police Company 508 aided the eight irregulars who were wounded, which is in addition to the 10 who were killed. As for the others, the report stated that it is understood that they were captured by - Khun Sa's forces. In this clash, inside Burma, Kh~sn Sa's forces numbered at least 2,000 men. It is no*_ known whether tnis operation by this brave unit was carried out in order to intercept the shi.pment of opium or to kill Khun Sa and receive the 500,000 baht reward, or even the 25 million baht. But in any event it was a heroic operation and it should be publicized much more than it has been instead of being hushed up as if there was something hateful behind it. 11943 = CSO: 5300/5666 - 16 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2407/42/09: CIA-RDP82-40850R000500450017-3 THAILAND ~ BRILFS DRUG SEMINAR--Deputy Prtme Minister Gen Prachuap Suntharangkun, who is also chairman of the Office of the Narcotics Control Board [ONCB], declared open the 5-day seminar on the prevention and treatment of drug dependence. ~ome 100 delegatea from Thailand and abroad, including internationaY organiza- tions, attended the conference ~oint~.y sponsored by the Internationa~ Council on Alcohol and Addiction, ONCB, and the Colombo Plan. The confer- ence aims to hold wide discussions on drug dependence, including alcohol and other drugs, as well as legal and law enforcement intervention, therapeutic intervention, treatment and rehabilitation. [Bangkok Voice of Free Asia in English 1100 GMT 22 Mar 32 BK] CSO: 5300/5689 17 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 - CANADA CONVICTION FOR COCAINE, MARIJtiANA TRAFFICKING Windsor THE WINDSOR STAR in English 26 Feb 82 p A8 [Article by Gary Rennie] [Text] Joseph Bowyer was convict- THE JURY found Bcwyer ' men p~id a185,000 for thc ed by an EsseA County Court guilty Wednesday of,posses- property, now aalled the Pilot jury Thursday of possession sion of 24 grams of cocaine, House~hesaid. for the purpose of trafficking 861 grams of marijuana, six BOWYER said he loaned in cocaine and mari juana. vials of hash oil and posses- more than 520,000 to Hunter The 59-year-old Windsor sion of an unregistered hand- but wasn t repaid and claimed busincssman will be sen- g~n ~ he took the drugs, a handgun, - tenced April S by visiting The issue of traf~cking was and other drug-rolated items County Court Judae Frank dcalt with separately by the from Hunter as collateral on Dunlap. jury. The burden of proof is on the loan. He said he had no He was remanded out of plans to sell the drugs himsbif. custody pending sentencing the ace~sed to shov~ that on a But Schwart~ said it didn'l balance of probabilities he but will report once� a wcek to was in possession of ttie drugs make sense for Bowyer to take Windsorpolice. d~ugs from Hunter as collat- Bowyer testified that co- for a purpose other than traf- eral when Hunter's interest in caine found b RCMP in his ficking. the marina.exceeded the val- car and other drugs found in The cocaine and two loaded ueof theloan. his Windsor a artmcnt be- handguns were found when p Bosvyer was stopped in his car RCMP, Sgt. Tom Stimpson, longed to a now-deceased a handwriting analyst and busincss artner and that he by RCMP Mar~h 13, 1980, p not far from' his Riverside document examiner, tcstificd had accepted the drugs as Drive East apartment. he examined known samples collateral on a loan. ~ BOWYER also denied that A 5EARCH of Bowyer s of Bowyer's handwriting and records seized from his apart- apartment after his arrest compared it with the han- ment by RCMP and dcaling turned up $61 grams of mari- dwritten records dealing with . with drug transactions were juana in two plastic bags, six ' drug transactions that were written by him. vials df hash oil, weighing ~ found in Bowyer's apartment. But federal prosecutor.Shcl- scales, and equipment that SGT. STIMPSON said he don Schwartz told the jury can be~ used to test the purity was satisfied all the records hc Bowyer's story was ridiculous. of cocaine. compared were written by Schwartz said it made no Bowyer invested in mortgag- Bowyer. , sense for a businessman of es in Windsor under his own RCMP Sgt. John Pratt, thc Bowyer's experi~nce to ac- name and a company name of ~ officer in charge of the force's St. Clair Investrnents. local dru section, 'said the cept drugs �as collateral on a He was also a co-owner of a g loan. The dr.ugs had no value value of cocaine at the time of LaSalle marina with Gary Bow er's. arrest was about un:ass thcy were sold, he poin- Parent and Roger Hunter~ y ted out. who died last year. The three ~1,800 to 52,600 per ounce . 18 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 and S90 to 5110 per gram ~ accepted a�box of drUgs and~ when sold on the street. drug�relat~d equipment from Pratt said the value of 861 Hunter, it would have made grams of marijua~na would more sense for; him �to have have been about 51,000 to put the boz away m a secure 51,100. The hash oil would place,Schwartzsaid. have sol~ for S30 to S35 for a Instead, Bowyer had various oncgram vial, 6e said, items ~ around his apartment, pRATT SAID the rccords including a substance used to found in Bowyer's apartment dilute cocaine in his ref~igera- dealt with a series of drug tor. This was consistent with transactions. . ~an existing dru~ . operation, Schwartz said. . Those records, which~ have bcen made ezhibits in the tri- al, refer to a latge number of transactions in cocaine, mes- caline, LSD, hash oil and C:~:,i uruga. � ~ Schwart~ tolri the ;~ry the evi;ience showed ?sowyer was a dr,ig dealer at the distribu= - tor level, not the street level. At the time of his arrest, Bowyer had two loaded hand- guns in the front seat area of the car, a holster under the soat, and cocaine in the glove compartment and trunk of his car, Schwartz noted. All this, he said, was cot?sistent with the operation of a drug dealer. IF BOWYER had reaUy CSO: 5320/24 19 . ; APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 CANADA MAN JAILED ON DRUG CHARGES CALLED MAJOR NIAGARA SELLER Toronto THE GLOBE AND MAIL? WEEKEND EDITION in English 6 Feb 82 p 5 [Text] Court was told that Charles Ryall told W ELLAND - A mau Mr. Mitchell was seen to Judge G. G. Nicholls described as a major enter the forest and pull that Mr. Mitchell was a supplier ot illicit drugs the cocaine from a rot- good neighbor, in the Niagara Region ten l~g. He had a Ger- was sentenced in County man shepherd dog with ln passing sentence, Court yesterday to eight him, but the animal Judge Nicholls noted years in prison on four failed to notice the hid- .~hat Mr. Mitchell com- drug charges, including den watchecs, even ' mitted the 1981 offences possession of ~,50a,000 though it once passed While out on bail on worth of cocaine for the within five feet of two Previous drug charges. purposes of trafficking. policemen. David Gordon Mit- Mr. Mitchell and his chell, 42, of Fort Erie, dog also failed to notice pleaded guilty to the two pollcemen 65 feet up cocaine char~e in addi- a tree, hidden behind a tion to a charge ot pos- rough blind of twigs. sessing !0 pounds ot When police called to marijuana valued at Mr. Mitchell, he ran and $9,000 for the purposes one officer [ired a warn- o( trafticking. ing shot into the air. Mr. 'The charges were laid Mitchell tell to the in September, 1981, by Bround and threw the the IViagara Regional botde away. Police drug ~cquad, [n a search of his which had staked out house after the arrest, Mr. Mitchell's secluded police [ound watchdogs country home for two stationed around the weeks and arrested him property and a jaguar when he retrieved a chained to the entrance - mayonnaise jar cantain- to the house. Mr. Mit- ing 1~,~ pounds of nlmost chell also kept a gaggle pure coc~ine from an ot geese, the best wern- - el~borate system of . ing system in the worid, hiding places in a torest Sgt. Stan Kryss said. next to his property. Defence lawyer CSO: ~32U/23 20 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 ' CANADA FIVE IMPRISONED P'OR NARCOTICS TRAFFICKING Windsor THE SATURDAY WINDSOR STAR in English 27 Feb 82 p A3 ' [Text] Five men werz sentenced in Essex ~they were detained, the cocaine was County Court to long prison tcrms this , found on Benic~. week for possessian of narcotics for the In an unrelated case, threc area men purposeof trafficking. received prison terms after lhey pleaded _ Patnck Benicy, 27, of Montreal was guilty to consFiracy to traffic in marijua- sentanced to 42 months in prison, and co- na. � accused, Ahthony Andreoni, 23, of Plan- Gary Freisinger, 23, and Graziano tation, Fla., received an 18�month sen- Callegari, 27, both of Windsor, wcre tence. sentenced to 30 months in prison, and a _ Both mcn pieadcd Auilty to possession co-accused, Mike Gillis, 27, of Colchest- of cocaine for the purpose of trafficking. er, received a 24-month sentence. They were arrested Nov. 13 on thc Cana- The thrcc men werc arrestcd July 7, ' dian sidc of the Windsor-Dctroit tunncl 1980, in P/yandottc, Michigan, as thcy attempting to smugglc in 14 ounces of werc loading a boat with 104 poun~s of cocaine worth more than $200,000 ~vhen marijuana worth more than 5100,000 broken down and sold on the street. when spld on thesircct. At thc time of their arrest, the two men '1'HE THREE WERE also under sur- were under surveillance by a combined veillance by RCMP, Michigan State force of RCMP and U.S. drug cnforce- Po~~ce, and U.S. drug enforcement ad= ment administration agcnts. , m~mstration agents at thc time. They were obscrvcd picking up the _ Bcnicy and Andreoni wcre sccn by marijuana in Rivcrsidc, Mich. and trans- - a~cr.ts Icaving a car together on thc U.S. porting it to a Wyandotte marina. ~ of the tunnel and then gct on a tunncl All five men +vcrc originally charged bus. ' with importing narcotics, which carrics a THEY SAT IN separatc seats on thc minimum sentencc of seven ycars in pris- bus and approached Canadian immigra- on, but plcadcd guilty to tlic lcsscr tion officials scparately as wcll. Aftcr chargcs. ~50: 5320/23 . ~ 21 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 CANADA BRIEFS = HEROIN SEIZED--A 28-yearrold Prince George man has been cha.rged following the sei,zure at Vancouver International Airport of 95 grams of heroin with a street sale value of about $1 million. Jeremy Edward Nelson-Kent appeared _ Monday in Rich~nond pr~vincial court and was remanded in custody to today. Nelson-Kent is charged with tmporting a narcotic and possession of heroin for the purpase of trafficking. [Text] [Vancouver THE VANCOUVER SUN in _ English 26 .Tan 82 p F8 ] DRLfGS SPUR CRIME WAVE--Monrreal (CP)--The illegai drug trade has reached an all-time high in Montreal high schools and many students are turning to crime to support their habits including establishing their own drug-selling ring, says the head of the Montreal police drug squad. Robbery is the most common method used by teenagers to obtain money to purchase drugs, Det.-Capt. Henri Marchessault said. Police statistics indicate 46 per cent of armed robberies in MontreaY are committed by teenagers. "The authors of these crimes often use the meney they obtain as capital to set up their own traff icking busi- nessesr" the detective says. Because of the illicit nature of the trade, ~ statistics are hard to formulate, but Marchessault estimates that the com- ~ bined mar~3uana and hashish market in the city is worth hundreds of millions of d~llars. Once accustomed to trafficking in so-called soft drugs, young people confidently turn to involvement in networks importing hard drugs such - as cocaine and heroin, adds RCMP Insp. A1 Breau. [Text] [Vancouver THE VANCOUVER SUN in English 3 Feb 82 p B2] CSO: 5320/23 22 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 ARGENTINA = BRIEFS _ ADDICTS ARRESTED--La Plata, 21 Mar--The Narcotica Department has arrested drug = addicts Jose Alberto Martin, Argentine, 36; and Uruguayan citizens Miguel - Angel Bermengo, 21; Martin Alvez Lopez, 25; and Romulo Ambrosio Vales Viera, 26. During the operation 250 grams of cocaine were seized. [PY261444 Buenos Aires CRONICA in Spanish 22 Mar 82 p 8] 1 TRAFFICKERS ARRESTED--Buenos Aires, 23 Mar (TELAM)--Police Offjcer Lucas Belich _ reported today on the arrest of 18 members of two drug traffic.'king organiza- tions and on the seizure of 10 and 1/2 kg of marihuana worth '141,500,000 Argen- tine pesos. The arrested persons are: Jose Serafin Aiello, ~lso known as , Pepe; Ruben Armando Moreno, also known as E1 Japones; Juan Carlos Perez, also known as Pingui; Carlos Alberto Ropano; Luis Roberto Gallino; Jorge E. Pillon; Nestor Angel Mentrina; Alberto Daniel ~osa; Mario Manuel Nunez; Raul E. Cairo; Adolfo Javier Aquilino; Enriqu~ Juan Scamani; Jose Angel Gentile; Jose Damasco Fernandez; Alejandro Biardini; Hugo Guillermo Nenervini; Eduardo Daniel Brener, and a minor whose identity has not be~en disclosed for legal reasons. [PY261444 Buenos Aires TELAM in Spanish 1715 GMT 23 Mar 82] TRAFFICKERS KILLED, ARRESTED--Salta, 17 Mar (TEI~AM)--Authorized sourcea re- ported here today that one unidentified drug trafficker was ehot dead and 10 others were arrested in an operation staged yesterday morning on Route 34 be- tween the border town of Pocitos and the city of Tartagal, north of Salta. About 1,000 kg of coca leaves and 6 kg of cocaine, allegedly manufactured in Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia, were seized in the operation. [PY201813 Buenos Aires TET..AM in Spanish 1343 GMT 17 Mar 82] CSO: 5300/2244 - 23 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2447/02/09: CIA-RDP82-44850R444544454417-3 BOLIVIA BRIEFS TRAFFICKERS ESCAPE PRISON--La Paz, 9 Mar (AFP)--It was reported here today that six drug traffickers [as received] have e~caped from the prieon in the city of Cochabamba. 1Fao of them have been recaptured, one was wounded in a confrontation, and Emilio Orellana, Andres Vusquez, Pedro Tapia, Pedro Villaroel and Pedro Esquivel are in hiding. Similarly, the Cochabamba police authorities reported that several hooded men, who passed themselves off as officials of the narcotics department, robbed a house located near the city of Cochabamba and killed one person. [PY261444 Paris AFP in Spaniah 2204 GMT 9 Mar 82] COCAINE FACTORY DISMANTLED--Santa Cruz, 15 Mar (PRESENCIA)--According to an of- ficial report, the army has dismantled a cocaine factory near the Japanese colony of Okinawa, 3 km from Santa C~uz., Thirty people were arrested and 54 kg _ of cocaine base were seized during the operation. [PY261444 La Paz PRESENCIA in Spanish 16 Mar 82 p 4] ~)FFICER DISCHARGED FOR TRAFFICKING--La Paz, 17 Mar (AFP)--It was reported here today thut Bolivian Army C^1 ~Pwt) Angel Garcia Ricaidi, has b~en dishonorabl.~ discharged for having been discovered transporting five trucks loaded with coca toward San Bor~ a, in the north of the country. [PY261444 Paria AFP in Spanish 0000 GMT 18 Mar 82] OFFICIAL CONVICTID ON DRUG TRAFFICKING--Miami, U.S., 22 Mar (AFP)--Former Sec- retary General of the Bolivian Agriculture Ministry Marcilio Ibanez Velez was sentenoed by a federal court here today to 2 years imprisonment for having tried to smuggle $8.5 million worth of cocaine into the United States. Federal _ Judge Eugene Spellman said when he pronovnced the verdict that the defendant could be released on his own cognizance after completing at least one-third of the sentence. U.S. suthorities were not able to capture Ibanez Ve1ez, 35, when the crime took place, but he traveled voluntarily to the United States in January and confeased his guilt. [Text] [PY231340 Paris AFP in Spanish 0307 GMT 23 Mar 82] CSO: 5300/2244 24 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2407/42/09: CIA-RDP82-40850R000500450017-3 . BRAZIL BRIEFS COCAINE SEIZED--The police seized 2.65 kg of cocaine in Rio de Janeiro yester- day. The following persons were arrested: Joao Candido da Silva, Jose Quintino Pereira (57) and his sons Aldo Quintino Barreto (22) and Francisco Jose Pereira (34). [PY261444 Rio de Janeiro JORNAL DO BRASIL in Portuguese 19 Mar 82 p 18] CSO: 5300/2244 25 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2407/42/09: CIA-RDP82-40850R000500450017-3 COLOMBIA MEXICAN COCAINE DEALER ACHIEVES FREEDOM Bogota EL TIII~O in Spanish 28 Feb 8'L p 2-A [Article: "A Mexican Trafficker Scoffed at Everyone and Ia Free"] [ Text] The "cock-and-bull story" of a lawyer, the apparent venality of a Legal Medicine official, and also the apparent ingenuousness of a criminal court 3udge made it possible for a powerful and dangerous international drug " trafficker to scoff at the Colombian authorities and to go to Mexico, his native country. David Enrique Kuri Mercader, a cocaine trafficking "leader," made use of every kind of trick to regain his frpedom, after his arrest in Bogota oz this past 4 December. When attempts at bribery of officials failed, his lawyer, with the help of alleged relatives, resorted to one of the legal provisions of the Legal Procedure Code and it turned out that the arrested person calmly flew of:' to his country. The odd but not unusual episode began some.days before 14 December 1981, when the Judicial Police of Eldorado received confidential information concerning the imminent arrival in Bogota of the Mexican drug trafficker, David Enrique Kuri Mercadez, who was to arrive from Lima. Detectives waited patiently until the arrival of the individual, who ~ntered the country, seemingly in conformity with legal procedures. Then the suspected per- son was carefully followed. On 14 December he arrived at the Eldorado airport, to board a plane for Miami. Kuri's Version When the detectives searched David Enrique Kuri, they found 4 kilos of cocaine hidden on his body. On being analyzed at the Legal Medicine Institute, the cocaine was declared 98 percent pure. At first Kuri Mercader gave a fantastic version, which obviously was not accepted bq the authorities. He said that when he was in Unicentro he became acquainted with som~ unknown persons, and that they soon afterwaru put him in an automobile and told him that if he did not take a shipment of drugs to the United States, they would retaliate against Kuri's relatives in Mexico. And that, being 26 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 pressured by this threat, he had decided to carry out the orders of the gang- sters. When Kuri Mercader realized how skeptical the Judicial Police wer2 of his _ "story," he changed tactics and offered money to the investigators if they would provide him with a favorab~e version. He told them that they should say that when he, Kuri, was arrested, he told the police that they had saved him from the threats of gangsters. ~ But the officials refused the offer, reported ~he fact, and placed the Mexican at the disposition of Judge 66 of the criminal court, Margot de Barragan. This - officer ordered that Kttri be detained. In the face of the failure of the above mentioned tricks, Kuri's lawyer decided to change his strategy. A powerful Mexican millionaire industrialist, Jose David Kuri Haddade, then appeared at the trial. He said that he was David Enrique's father and, in support of this, he presented a civil record to _ establish the relationship. � Then the industrialist said that his health was affected by the altitude of Bogota and went to Cartagena "on an emergency basis." ^~here, Algio de Leon, a physician in the service of the Legal Medicine Institute, diagnosed Kuri Haddade as being in imminent danger of death. Kuri's lawyer used this certifi- cation and referred to article 452 of the Penal Procedure Code, which allows the suspension of preventive detention if the arrested person "is afflicted with a serious illness or when one of his immediate relatives or offspring, or the pers4n's husband or wife, is in iffiinent danger of death in the ~udgment of official doctors." _ Judge 66 of the criminal court, Margot de Barragan, heard the petition of the lawyer, decreed suspension of the detention, and returned Kuri's passport to him. She abstained, however,~'from obtaining authentication through consular channels of. the civil record that presumably established that the "sick person" was really Kuri's father. Also, she omitted legal arrangements regarding sur- veillance for the person who had been granted the previously mentioned suspen- sion. Judge Margot de Barragan's decision produced a"miraculous cure" in the health of. industrialist Jose David Kuri Haddade and the latter, accampanied by his alleged son, "as soari as he was free" flew up and away to Mexico, very much out of reach of the hands of Colombian authorities. In the face of such mockery, the legal department of Bogota, headed by lawyer _ Fernando Navas Talero and the Attorney General's Office of the Nation, and through the Judicial Police, started an investigation, according to which it was established that Kuri Haddade had never been sick and that, ir? addition, it was never fully verified that he was the father of the drug trafficker. - 27 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 i I i ~ ! One of the indignant investigators of this case told EL TIEMPO that the gangsters ~ are right when they say that in Colombia "when the judicial authorities are not stupid, they can be bought." And international drug trafficking organizations ~ make good use of this circumstance. They coldly calculate everything..." 4 ~j, , A; :~Y...:.. ! 7 'F ; t. ~ K ' ,'e , h.. ~ ~ - David Enrique Kuri g255 cso: 5300/2215 28 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2407/42/09: CIA-RDP82-40850R000500450017-3 COLOMBIA BRIEFS MARIHUANA SEIZED IN CESAR--Seven tona of marihuana ready for export were seized by the Colombian narcotics police in Becerril and Cadazzi, Cesar Department. The drug traffickers fled before the police arrived. A clandestine airstrip with gasoline for refueling sirplanes uaed for trans- porting marihuana was discovered in La Piauela, (Pidi~ay), Magdalena Department. [PA2618U9 Bogota Radio Cadena Nacional in Spanish 1730 GMT 24 Mar 82] CSO: 5300/2221 29 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000504050017-3 , � ~ ~ ~r'. .w ~ F F~ ~:r: ' j.~. � t " ( ~ I ~ ~J, ~ 6: ~ w"~ r ~ ~ . . .A g~~~ . . � 1 �n . . ~ : . _ . . ~ ~.ya ~r,~:~.... � ~ s . . ' ~ . ~~R~. . 1 _ ~ i _ ~ `y ~ . i . _ '1~~: ~li 1 ' ~ ~ ~~;r~".; r ~ . R,imiro Vazquez Garza, ~dwiges Enrique Martinez Vazquez, Abraham Martinez V~~�r.quez, Santos Vazquez Garza and Pedro Villarreal Trevino were arrested by el~c I~ederal Police in a gully running from Guerrero to Sabinas, with a large sl~ipment of smuggled electronic items. The latter was found to have half a gram of cocaine in his possession. 2909 CSO: 5330/70 ~ 31 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000504050017-3 i i i i MEXICO ; SMUGGLERS OF ELECTRONIC GOODS CAPTURED WITH COCAINE ; Nuevo Laredo EL MANANA in Spanish 18 Feb 82 Sec D p 9 [Text] Agents of the Federal Judicial Police confiscated television sets and all types of electronic items in a gully between Guea-rero and Sabinas Hidalgo, and succeeded in arresting five individuals, one of whom had with him half a gram of ~ocaine, whicli he claimed to be for his personal consumption. Ramiro Vazquez Garza, Edwiges Enrique Martinez Vazquez, Abraham Martinez Vazquez, Santos Vazquez Garza and Pedro Villarreal Trevino are the individu- als who were captured by the Federal Police and taken t:o this port to be placed at the disposal of the federal prosecutor on charges of smuggling. Villarreal Trevino is the one found to have in his possession a small piece of paper containing a substance that was said to be cocaine, to which he = claimed to be addicted. Now, the pol.ice will question him concerning the manner in which that drug was supplied to him. The contraband, valued at 300,000 pesos, will be turneci over to the customs , authorities, according to the Federal Public Ministry, together with two vehicles, a pickup truck and a Volkswagen in whi~ch they were carrying the i smuggled goods. They stated that they were attempting to carry the latter ~o Sabinas.Hiflalgo, Nuevo Leon, where they would seek the means of shipping them farther aouth. i As has been noted, the Federal Judicial Police have been dealing heavy blows to the smuggling of goods all along the border strip. ' 30 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 MEXICO BRIEFS HEROIN RING SUSPECTS ARRESTED--One of the ma~or figures in the border drug traffic, considered to have had this status for years, was captured by the Federal Judicial Police yesterday in this town, in an operation carried out to arrest the ringleader of the drug trafficking group that has been active in this region. The foregoing was reported to EL DIARIO yesterday by Federal - Judicial Police sources, in connection with others allegedly arrested wi~h Enrique Campos. The information provided last night was brief, and no offi- cial report or bulletin was issued announcing this important arrest. As may be recalled, Gustavo Campos (Enrique's brother), an individual who had been arrested with Beto Rodriguez, in Guadalajara, with over 8 ounces of pure cocaine, was released a few months ago. The trail of a presumed heroin distri- Lution in this port is being followed, as is a purchase and sale contact which reportedly took place within the past few days. It is not known whether Enrique Campos was captured with any drugs, and it has been claimed that some more information regarding this arrest may be provided today. [Text] [Piedras Negras EL DIARIO DE PIEDRAS NEGRAS in Spanish 5 Mar 82 Sec A p 2] 2909 MARIHUANA SHIPMENT SEIZED--A total of 250 kilograms of marihuana concealed in the double bottom of a tank-type truck coming from Nayarit was seized by Federal Judicial Police forces at the Ben~amin Hill plant health station. The drugs are worth 11.5 million pesos on the black market in the United States, the country to which they were enroute. The Federal Public Ministry agent, Pablo Ernesto Avila Triana, announced that the arrests of those responsible took place in two parts. The first one oc~urred on the Altar- Caborca highway, where the federal agents arrested Jesus Hector Lopez Beltran and Leonido Noriega Lopez, who were traveling in a 1977 Ford pickup truck with State of Mexico license plates. When they were suh~ected to close questioning, those arrested stated that they had been dri~vin~ in �.order':~A~~�imd the tank-type truck driven by Manuel Vazquez Torres, to obtain the marihuana shipment that was later to be taken into the United States for sale. A few moments later, those responsible for the aforementioned drugs gave the names of two other individuals implicated in this drug traffic, namely, the following: Jose Cruz Felix and Miguel Orozco, who were also arrested and placed at the disposal of the agent of the Federal Puhlic Ministry. Avila Triana also ~ reported that the 250 kilo~rams carried in the lower section of the tank- type truck, which had been divided into 43 cardboard boxes, is the largest marihuana seizure made this year. [Text] [Hermosillo EL IMPARCIAL in Spanish 11 Mar 82 Sec A p 2] 2909 32 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R400540050017-3 NINE DRUG PLAN7'ATIONS DESTROYED--A total of nine plantations on which poppies and marihuana were being grown, located in the Alamos mountain area, on Cajon de Guirocosa, a communal farm belonging to the municipality of Alamos, Sr~nora, were burned by forces from the Fourth Military Zone, affiliated with the - Canador (Ma.rihuana-Poppy] Plan. The agent of the Federal Public Ministry, Pablo Ernesto Avila Triana, stated that on these plantations, which covered an area of approximately 5 hectares, two persons answering to the names of - Gregorio Leon Ochoa and Luciano Apodaca Cebreros were arrested. Both were communal farmers, who were responsible for tending four plantations in that area. He added that, when these individuals were questioned, they gave the names of other subjects who are more directly involved in the planting of these types of drugs, and who ur.ill not be mentioned for purposes relating to the investigation, since it is intended to capture the ringleaders of this or~anized gang. As. for the value of the drugs which were burned, Avila Triana said that the plants per se have no value except for the product extracted from them after they have been planted for some time, namely, heroin. In this case, he noted, it is estimated that the organized underworld ring intended to procure heroin which, when processed, would command a price of 2 million pesos on the black market. He said that the most important aspect _ of this case is the fact that, when these drug plantations are de~troyed, the Mexican farmers are reincorporated into the country's food pro'duction, while at the same time the marketing of drugs is eradicated. [Text] [Hermosillo EL Irg'ARCIAL in Spanish 10 Mar 82 Sec A p 10) 2909 CUSTOPIS GUAItD, TItE1FF1CKER KILLED--A drug trafficker with a sinister record in tllis town was killed early Tuesday morning during a gun battle with customs ~;uards in a gully before h~ could reach Monterrey, Nuevo I.eon. According to tiie reports supplied from rionterrey by.the commander of the Seventh Customs 'l,one, Jesus Avalos Ficachi, the deceased answered to the name of Rodolfo G,irza Cortez, alias "E1. Opi"; however., the name of the guard killed in the skirmish was not pro~~ided, because the Nuevo I,eon authorities are continuin~; Cl~e Lnvestigation. It was said that Garza Cortez was driving a small truck chrc~ugh tiie gully, where a checkpoint had been established by the customs c~ft=i.cials, who ordered the trafficker to halt; but the latter, instead of ~~;~,~yin~ the command, r.esponded by firing a pisto].. One of the bullets aimed ,:it tile group of custc~ms of�icials hit a member of the latter, and hence they i-ct~.irned the Pire, killing the drug trafficker. This individual had been incarcerated in ttie T,a Loma prison on several occasions, on charges of crimes a~ainst health; and his ci�iminal career began in 1971. The latest action take.n against Garza Cortez was brought by the penal judge of the first i.~i~;~aci;~e, for the comrnission of a crime of stealing livestock; and he was - rc~leaseci in that case on 29 June of last year. Thus far, the reasons for ~he decea~ecl's firing at the guards are unknown, but it is presumed that the rruck which re cvas driving was stolen, and that at the same time he was c:~irryir.g foreign goods brought into the country illegally. [Text] [Nuevo L~~r~.cio EL DIARIO DE NUEVO LAREDO in Spanish 4 Mar 82 Sec A p 8] 29U9 rir1RIHUANA TRAFFICKERS JAILED--Yesterday, the second district judge issued a writ ior o~fi.cial imprisonmenC of Jose Luis Rodriguez Robles, or Luis Manuel Rud.riguez Robles, alias "La Escalera", and Francisco Galvan Urbina, as 33 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 - individuals presumed guilty of a crime againat health in the degree of mari- huana transportation. Following their release from ~ail, the two sub~ects ' heard the decision of the judge in whose ~urisdiction the action to be taken against them .�or the crime committed previously uTill he continued. 'rhe Federal Judicial Police arrested "La Escalera" and his wife, Grise~da Zamudio, as well as Francisco, when they were traveling.in a Mexican Airlin~s plane last Wednesday, carrying with them three suitcases filled with marihu~na, having a total weight of 30 kilograms. Naturally, "La Escalera" and Galvan Urbina denied the charges, particularly the statements that they had made to the State Judicial Police guard, claiming that they had been pressured to declare themselves guilty. The release of Griselda Zamudio took place at the agency of the Federal Public Ministry, according to the legal reserva- tions, after the other two had stated that she had nothing to do with this _ case. "La Escalera", a sub~ect with a police record in this town, had been watched for some time, when it was found that he was trafficking with grass, using the Mexican Airlines plane arriving from Mexico City. At first, this subject confessed that he had been engaged in this illegal busin.ess for some time. [Text] [Nuevo Laredo EL MANANA in Spanish 3 Ma.r 82 Sec B p 7] 2909 CSO: 5330/73 34 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2447/02/09: CIA-RDP82-44850R444544454417-3 PANAMA ROUTES, METHODS OF COLOMBIAN COCAINE TRAFFICKERS DISCUS~Ln Sao Paulo 0 ESTADO DE SAO PAULO in Portuguese 7 Mar 82 p 180 [Article by John Alius] [Text] Panama, by virtue of its strategic position as the _ hub of air traffic in the Western Hemisphere, is today an important point of intersection in international drug smuggling. Although precise statistics are unavailable on the volume of traffic in the country, it is estimated - that about $20 billion annually in cocaine, marijuana and other narcotics destined for consiuner countries pass through Panama. The narcotics ori~inate primarily in Colombia, which in recent years b.as become notorious for its cocaine; the,y arrive in the Caribbean aboard cemmercial and private air.craft, freighters or small vessels and are subsequently reshipped from Pana~ia City. Increasingly, the - preferred route is via Brazil. At first glance, to ship - Colombian cocaine from Panama to the United States via Brazil might seem senseless. However, the narco~ics syndicates are opting for "circuitous" routes to confuse - drug enforcement agencies and throw them off the track. In ,:his highly lucrative trade, which has become ihe most serious criminal problem in the United States, t?~e Colombians are the cruelest and most ruthless murderers in this hemisphere. Panama City--It only took a long afternoon asking questions in certain places to obtain several names and telephone numbers, but then it took 3 1/2 days of ~ patient flattery and ca~oling to arrange a meeting. This :Ls not surprising; the matter at hand was an illegal business which, in the United States alone, annually represents more money than the Gross Domestic Product of most countries. From the outset, we made no attempt whatever to deceive ~he professionals in the field. We ~zever said we were new to the business and wanted, if possible, to negotiate with them--a lie which they would have seen through immediately. We said simply that Panama is known as an important crossroad for _ international narcotica traffic and that there must be sameone, on the wrong 35 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2407/42/09: CIA-RDP82-40850R000500450017-3 side of the law, who was willing to discuss the matter. That someone, as we had already predicted, was a Colombian. Some years ago the l'anamanians ~aere deeply involved in durg traffic, hut today, although Panama is considered the major exchange post for illegal drug traffic to the L)nited States and other countries, it is the Colombians who are directing the _ operations. This is primarily for two reasons. The first is that the Colombians control the flourishing production fo cocaine, which has become the world's preferred narcotic, and the Colombians are extremely ruthless when it - comes to insuring their control over the wholesale and even the retail distribution of the product. The second reason is that Panama's former strong u~an Omar Torrijos instilled an int~nse fear of drug traffic in his countrymen. This does not mean that money from the drug trade is nc longer circulating among Panamanians. Generally, however, the amounts ar~ small. The Colombian had the egotistical air of someone who kn~ws he is an important figure, ableit in a closed circle of outlaws. Curiously, however, he did not dress at all ostentatiously; the only jewelry he wore was a gold watch with a gold band. Our meeting, arranged through a local journalist, took place in the dinuiess of one of the countless nightclubs on Avenida Espana in Yanama City. These establishments charge exorbitant prices to the tourists who venture out from their luxury hotels to frequent them. "You can call me Sanchez," the Colombian said. "Roberto Sanchez. kiy wife, my ].overs, the Panamanian authorities and the U.S. drug enforcement agents know my real name. But you can call me Sanchez. "The problem for the police," he added. "is that Lhey know who I~m and what 1 do, but they have no evidence to prove it." This because, although = Sanchez annually deals in billions of dollars in drug trade, he has never had any physical cor~tact with the cocaine, heroin, marijuana or narcotics in pill ferm th:~t pass through Panama. "'i'I~~ people who deal in this material or, as in my case, ship it are smart and ricl~," he said pioudly at one point. "The people who use it are dumb and, for ti~e most part, poor. 1. have never personally used any of the drugs that come through here because I am known and I do not want to be caught with drugs in - my pussession. I only arrange contacts between couriers and make and revise travel plans--things like that." :~:ulcher. describes himself as a combinarion of dispatcher and, occasionally, bill payc~r and collector for one of. the five or six Colombian syndicates that - u:;~~ Panama as a redistribution point. "Most of the money changes hands in (:ol.ombta, Miami and New York--some of it in Frankfurt and some other European l'li:{ES~~~ he adds. "Even so, a few million passes through my hands every year mid 1 enjoy the feel of it." According to Sanchez, his syndicate generally uses commercial flights, but also - uses small private planes, one or two freighters and small ships. The ~ 36 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2447/02/09: CIA-RDP82-44850R444544454417-3 The syndicate's cocaine shipments through Panama last year was between $3.5 billion and $4.5 billion--t~e "street" value of the product. "This year the fig~re will be much higher," he added. "In the first place, the prices will be higher, and in the second place, with the disappearance of Torrijos, we foresee a relaxation of the vigilance against us here in Panama, which will enable us to use this area on a much larger scale than before. " Torrijos was killed in an air disaster at the end of last year. Some 10 years ago, disturbed by reports in the world press about the involvement of Panamanian gavernment officials and diplomats (who were said to include his _ older brother Moises), Torri~os ordered a campaign against drug traffic, especially against the participation of Panamanian citizens, and he maintained his concern in the matter until his death. Even so, only a small part of the drugs that pass through Panama is confiscated. _ In 1981, $10 million worth of drugs was confiscated. As astronomical as that fi.gure seems, it becomes almost insignificant when it is estimated that about $20 billian in cocaine and other narcotics goes to coneumer countries via Panama. Billions at Stake The DEA (Drug Enforcement Administration), the U.S. agency for the control ot drug traffic, has a branch in Panama, with offices in the Embassy of the - United States. A DEA ~gent said that no one has reliable statistics on the volume of traffic through Panama. "To know the exact amount, it would be necessary to detain every trafficker and check out his bag, but we have an approximate idea, based on the quant9.ty of drugs actually seized and on the estimated consumptioi~ of these products in the United States. According to these calculations, between $15 billion and $20 billion in narcotics passed through Panama last year, owing to ehe strategic location of the country." The figure mentioned by the American agent is generally consistent with the information supplied by Sanchez, since the Colombian said his syndicate wr..s only one of five or six syndicates that use Panama in their operations. _ According to DEA estimates (based on "street" prices), over $32 billion in c~caine and $27 billion in marijuana was smuggled into the United States last year, over al~ routes. Panamanian authorities dispute the figures supplied by the DEA regarding the drtig traffic through Panama. According to one of these sources, based on ~ street prices, the traffic was "more or less on the order of $1 billion;" another source put the figure much higher: $12 billion. Like the DEA agent, however, these sources admit they have no concrete evidence on which to base their estf-~ates. For the drug smugglers, Panama's value lies in the fact that the country is at the center of the air traffic in the Western Hemisphere and is located close to northern Colombia. In recent years, Colombia has become so notorious as a cocaine producer that customs inspectors all over the world go on the a 37 ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 alert when planes or ships arrive directly from that country. Consequently, the syndicates ship their cocaine, marijuana and illegally manufactured drugs, such as quaaludes by all the routes at their disposal, preferring Panama as the point of reshipment. The cocaine is almost always shipped by air, frequently on private planes that fly only short distances and land on clandestine fields, but also aboard commercial flights and on small - vessels that unload their cargo on the Caribbean coast. Whatever the means of their arrival in the country, the cocaine and pills are almost always rerouted through Panama City. The marijuana frequently goes through the region of Colon. "An increasingly popular route," the DEA agent said, is from Panama via Brazil. To ship Colombian cocaine to the Unite3 States from Panama via Brazil does not make much sense, at first glance, but when you are dealing in a product worth billions of dollars, a few extra hours of flight time, a iittle added expense, ceases to be important. "There is almost as Iittle inclination to ship the drug directly from Panama to Miami of New York as there is to ship it directly from Bogota or Medellin. Those responsible for suppression of drug smuggling are already expecting this, but, in the past, who would have expected cocaine to arrive in New York from Rio de Janeiro? The U.S. customs inspectors certainly were not expecting it, and many of them do not consider such a possibility even ~oday. Nor were the ~irazilians expecting cocaine from Panama, because there is not much demand for it in Brazil." Sanchez confirms this: "zt is no secret to the narcotics agents (otherwise I wtiuld not be telling you, obviously) that we are using the most circuitous and confusing routes we can think of to get the material out of Panama. Cost is not an important factor. Last year we moved regular amounts of the material through Brazil." Creating a Profession Dr.�~s are transported, for the most part, by "couriers" who fly on commercial p l.:iries . "Many of these couriers," Sanchez said, "are individuals who are prepared to take the risk just one time, to earn what seems to them to be a`huge bundle." f.iut there are a surprising number of people, at least in our organization, - who make a career of it. They are not at all worried about the risk." Sanchez prefers good-looking women to serve as one-time couriars. "When we recruit a woman with good legs and a pretty face, there is every likelihood ttiat she will succeed in getting a few kilos of the drug through customs witi~.out any problem. The customs officers are just like any other men; they are a little shy around a pretty woman and are not inclined to suspect her, much less give her a hard time." 38 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 Besides Brazil, Mexico has also become inc.reasingly popular as an inte~nediate point in shipping cocaine from Panama to the United States. A half-dozen _ airlines fly between Panama and Mexico, and the Mexicans, more hospitable to tourists than any other Latin American people, almost always allow passengers through customs without any problems. From Mexico City, the couriers may choose among various airlines with connecting flights to several North American cities besides New York and Miami, such as Los Angeles, San Antonio and Chicago. Some of them rent cars at Mexico City's international airport and drive to the American border. At some points--Ti~uana, Nuevo Laredo, Ciudad Juarez and Matamoros--*_he U.S. customs inspectors have been on the alert for drug smugglers for some time, but in many other locations it is almost as easy to cross the border as it is to travel from one state to another in the United States. "It is a long trip from Mexico City to the border, but it is worth the trouble," said Sanchez, "because it pays off." The DEA agenst are disappointed that they are not intercepting as much cocaine in Panama as they think they should. "But if you think about it," said one agent, "why should the Panamanians, Me:xicans and othe rs be concerned about drugs passing through their countries destined for the United States? The fact is that in their own countries, even in Colombia, they have few problems with narcotics, so they feel it is up to the consumer, i.e., the United States, to stop the drug traffic. They see little reas~n to do our work for us." Sanchez agrees that there is little demand for drugs in Panama. "If we had to live off the sale of cocaine and mari~uana to the Panamanians, we would starve to death. There is a certain demand for cocaine here in Panama City--by high society, on one hand, and poor people on the other--and a certain market for marijuana. In Colon, more mari~uana is sold than cocaine, because the people there are poorer. But is is so little that it is not worth discussing." Panama City, with its bustling international airpurt, is the transfer point for cocaine; Colon, an important port on the Atlantic side of the isthmus, is used for marijuana. Pure cocaine d~es not travel well un3er himid conditions; therefore, given the _ gr~at value of the product, it is usually transported by air. A quantity of cocaine with a retail value of $1 million in New York City can easily be concealed between the shirts and socks in a man's hand luggage. I'roduction of this incredible substance begins in Colombia, Peru and Bolivia. It starts with coca, in the form of small, thick green leaves that grow in - clusters. The leaves, which were once chewed by the Indians in those countries as a mild stimulant, are gathe~ed, boi.led and sold to primary processors for less than $20 per kg. Thp processors place the leaves in open pits in the ground or in 200-liter barrals. They cover them with a mixture of kerosene, sulfuric acid, potassium carbonate and water, and let them "cook" for several days to extract the cocaine hydrochlorate. The resulting precipitate is a thick pasty substance, ashy-white in color, with a kerosene ordor. It is known as cocaine paste. The paste, worth $4,000 to $8,000 per kg, is sent to 39 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000504050017-3 laboratories--most of which are located in Colombia but some of them are in Pert~ and Amazonia--where it is refined and turned into what is custamarily calleu "pure cocaine." At this point--the stage at which the material reaches Panama--it is wort:~ $20,000 per kg, and it will be worth $50,000 when it reaches its destination in the United States or, sometimes, in Europe. There it is combined with various other material in a mixture containing about 10 percent pure cocaine, packaged in tiny envelopes and sold on the retail market for $100 to $125 per gram, that is, over ~80,000 per kg. This is the so-called "street value" of the drug. ~ Bribery Part of the Business ; "The idea," said Sanchez, "is to reduce the volume of the material as much as - possible before shipping it. One of the beauties of the business is that you start with a huge volume of coca leaves; these are reducPd to practically _ nothing--the phase in which the material is shipped to the market--and then y~u expand the volume again by adulterating. Marvelous!" According to the Panamanian police, there are several small operators in the country. They get the refined cocaine from the syndicates that use Panama as a transfer point and prepare it for sale on the local retail market. There are no laboratories in Panama for production of refined cocaine, however, much less for cocaine paste, the initial phase of production. I:ven if it were practical to set up iaboratories in Panama, the Colombian syndicates would hardly have done so, for two reasons, according to Sanchez. "The laboratories would certainly ha~~e been discovered and they would have had to pay huge br.ibes to keep them in operation. And if the bribes didn't work--which would probably have been the case in Torri~os' time--the punishment here would have beer, swift and harsh." � Nonetheless, Sanchez sa3d that he and his colleagues from other syndicates bribe of.Eicials of Panama's air and sea ports, which costs them thousands of dol.lars ~ year. "it's part of the business. You think we don't bribe North Amc~,-ican ~:trport employees? If I didn't buy off certain people here, before lnnt; we would not have any "pack mules" (couriers)." In Panama the penaltie~s for drug smuggling could amount to several years in ~rison, and they are imposed af.tEr summary trials. As an indication of how - Panamanian justice can be "swift ~nd harsh," there is the example of a purse-snatching on a xecent Sunday afternoon. The theft occurred at 1430 I~o~.irs. The thief was arrested after a swift chase, booked at a police station, eaken to a local court, tried and sentenced to a year in prison at 1630 hours t:h:it same af.ternoon. � ~ "Omar s~1id to us before he died that we must put a stop to crime in this r.ountry." a policeman said. Torrijos was so disturbed by the reports involving Panama in dr~ig traffic that he declared he was even prepared to - order the arrest of his own brother. When Moises Torri~os was a Panamanian ambassador, in 1972, U.S. Government - oti`icials accused him of being involved in smuggling heroin into the United 40 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2407/42/09: CIA-RDP82-40850R000500450017-3 States. Other Panamanian diplomats were also accused. Omar Torri3os "begged" them to present ev3dence that the ac.cusations against his brother were founded in fact, "because, if he is gui.lty, I will send him to prison." No evidence was ever forthcoming against Moises, but other prominent Panamanians were arrested. One of them was the former chief of the intern3tional transit department of Tocumen Airport in Panama City. Since then, Moises Torri3os has been on the ~ringes of political life in Panama. None of the Panamanian political parties is inclined to take him very seriously and, at least in recent years, no prominent Panamanian appears~ to have been involved in drug smuggling. "I could talk abc,ut some 'small fish,"` Sanchez said, "i.n both civilian and military sectors, but it would be very risky for me." The Ameri~an DEA office in Panama is one of the largest existing in foreign countries, but its agents will not talk. . "All our investigations are secret and, actually, everything we do is to assist our Panamanian colleagues," said a DEA spokesman. "You can be sure ~ that there are very good reasons for the existerice of a DEA office in Panama." One of the reasons is that known and suspected couriers and traffickers who pass through Panama can be reported to DEA colleagues in the United States. Cruelest Assassins Paco Sepulveda and Marta Lidia Cardona are two Colombians who visit Panama from time to time to keep the business wheels running smoothly. It is known that Sepulveda ships cocaine from Colombia to New York via Panama and Mexico. Cardona ships his merchandise mainly to Miami and other northern points in the United States, using South American routes. Sepulveda is living in Mexico. Cardona, who occupied a lwcurious residence in Miami before he was obliged to flee the country last year, is now directing nis operations from Colowbia. He was arrested "in flagrante" by the DEA in the United States and, since his trial was coming up, he posted bond of $200,000 to obtain his release and flerl the country. For him, this was a pittance. Before he moved to Mexico, Sepulveda had his command post in New York. He left the United States because he had tried to take over another syndicate's territory and the climate in New York was very sticky for him. Justice officials the world over consider Colombiar~ drug traffickers to be the most ruthless criminals in the hemisphere. In l~ew York and Miami, where various syndicates and even independent traffickers are always trying to "cut each other's throats," there are severa`1 killings every month. Sepulveda left New York after he narrowly escaped being shot to death by a gunman who killed one of his assistants. Since then, killers seeking to take 41 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 - over the operations he directs from abroad have already murdered a half-dozen members of Sepulveda's ring. Qne of them was a 32-year-old Colombian named Jose Martinez, who carried six false passports. He, his wife and two daughters were recently kille~d on a New York street. A shotgun and a O.y caliber Beretta were tne murder weapons. The two adults and the 4-ye~.r-old daughter, who were inside a car, were killed instantly. When the gunmen saw that the other child, aged 16 months, was still aliv~, they pulled her from thQ car by her feet and put six bullets in her bacic. Police who inspected the Martinez apartment after the killing found $1 million in cash, 70 kg of cocaine and several plastic bags containing gold jewelry. "Nothing like that happens in Panama," said a police official. "We know _ perfectly we11 that the drugs come through here, although we feel that the volume is not as high as is thought. We do what we can to interrupt the flow, biit we have limited resources. I can say, however, that if these murders occurred in Panama we would probably punish some people first and ask questions later." "There is no reason for bloadshed in Panama," Sanchez said. "We ~ust work here as dispatchers. The killings happen at the end of the line. It has never occurred to me to rip off some courier on his way to the hotel. We Colombians here live and let live." The drug-re~.ated crimes in Panama seem to occur mainly in Colon and are generally the result of squabbles between local operators over the sale of ma r i j uana . Crass is easily obtained in Colon. Some transoceanic freighters that dock at ~his large port are used~in marijuana traffic, but most of the marijuana, like th~ smal.l amount of cocaine *_ransported by sea, is carried on smaller ships. According to information from sailors in Colon, a method often used to take dr~~gs out of. Colombia consists in loading them on "fishing" boats which ren~levous in Panamanian waters, to the north, with high-speed American i~~;;iiry yachts. Drug smuggling is so lucrative that when the yachts' owners , ar-c~ i.n danger of being apprehended they do not hesitate to abandon their boats, wl~i.ch are worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. Many of these yachts are moored at Florida ports, confiscated by the Coast Guard. _ It is extremely difficult to detect these boats entering and leaving P~iiamanian waters and even more difficult to catch them, because of the limited - number of patrol boats available. "It is only the airports that we can make at~y real Fragress in combating drug traffic," said a Colon inspector. - Tl~e PBI (Federal ~3ureau of Investigation) also has ageFits in the U.S. Embassy in I'znama. It is probable that they will soon join with their colleagues in the DEA znd the Panamania suthorities in an effort to cut off the passage of drugs rhrough this country. U.S. Attorn~y General William French S:nith rec~ntly called narcotics the "most serious criminal problem" in the United States. 6362 CSO: 5300/2223 G2 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2447/02/09: CIA-RDP82-44850R444544454417-3 ' IRAN BRIEFS QUCHAN DRUG SEIZURE--The anti-drug squad has announced that during the past week they have seized 8 kg of heroin and 151.960 kg of opium from a number of persons in Quchan, Kashmar and Rey. [GF?'.1804 Tehran ETTELA'AT in Persian 22 Feb 82 p 2 GF] TORBAT-E JAM OPIUI~i SEIZiTRE--The Torbat-e Jam anti-drug squad has seized 450 kg of opium from a number of persons. [Tehran ETTELA'AT in Persian - 22 Feb 82 p 4 GF] _ NEYSHASUR OPZUM SEIZURE--The Neyshabur Islamic Revolut3on Committee has seized 10 kg of opium and arrested the members of a smuggling band. [Tehran ETTELA'AT in Persian 22 Feb 82 p 4 GF] TEHRAN DRUG SEIZURES--Members of ant�i-drug squad have se3zed 1.3 kg of heroin in TeY~ran. The public relations official of this squad announced its activities between 22 November and 19 February as follows: a) the Khorasan gendarmerie has ,eized 204.850 kg of opium; b) the Gorgan anti- drug squad has seized 2.45 kg of heroin; c) in Sistan va Baluchestan Province the anti-drug squad has seized 79.5 kg of hashisln from a number of persons; d) the East Azarbay~an gendarmerie has seized 148 kg of opium, and 26,053 kg of heroin; e) the Yazd gendarmerie has seizec 1.5 kg of opium and similarly, the Hamadan anti-drug squad has seized 3.750 kg of opium. [ Tehran ET'TELA'AT in Persian 22 Feb 82 p 13 GF]. DRUGS SEIZED.IN NEHAVAND--The Nehavand Islamic Revolution Court has sentenced two persons to death for possession of 22,6 kg of opium. The Esfahan Islamic Revolution Court has sentenced one person to death for possession and sale of 20.8 kg o.f opium ~uice and 106 kg of opium and for hidin~ another 32 kg of opium. [Tehran JOMHURI-YE ESLAMI in ~ersian 21 Feb 82 p 2 GF] OPIUM SEIZED IN nARREH GAZ--The Darreh Gaz anti-drug squad has seized 5 kg of opium from one person. [Tehran JOMHURI-YE ESLAMI in Persian 22 Feb 82 p 4 GF] _ OPIUM SEIZURE IN SARAKHS--The Sarakhs gendarmerie has seized 25 kg of opium from two persons. [Tehran JOMHURI-YE ESLAMI in Persian 2y Feb 82 p 4 GF] ~ 43 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00854R000540050017-3 HAMADAN HEROIN :'EIZURE--The Hamadan anti-dru~ squad has seized 26.5�1 kg of heroin. [Tehran KEYHAN in Persian 28 Feb 82 p 15 GF] SHIRAZ OPIUM TRAFFICKING--The Islamic revolution court of Shiraz sentenced a woman and man to life imprisonment on charges of trafficking 25.5 kg of opium. [Tehran Ki;YHAN in Persian 27 Feb 82 p 7 GF] BOSTANABAD OPIUM SEIZU:E-~-Committee guards of Bostanaba:i seized 25 roll opiinn weighing 0.500 grams from an individual. ~Tehran KEYHAN in Persian 27 Feb 82 p 7 GF] OPIUM DISCOVERY IN SABZVAR--Islamic revolutionary guards in Sabzvar seized 22.200 kg of opium and 30 roll opium from two professional traffickers. - [Tehran KEYHAN in Persian 27 Feb 8~ p 7 GF] ESFAHAN DRUG DISCOVERY--The Esfahan police seized the following quantities of drugs between 21 .January and 19 FPbruary: 1.743 kg heroin, 3.246 kg opium, 0,97 gram burned opium, 0.505 grams opium ~uice, 22 grams of (jouhar-e naghari) and 105 tablets or hallucinogin. [Tehran KEYHAN in Persian 27 Feb 82 p 8 GF] OPIUM SEIZED IN 'ALIGUDARZ--Brother members of resistance headquarters of Deh Now vi].lage of 'Aligudarz seized 2 kg of opium ~rom several traffickers. [Tehran KEYHAN in Persian 27 Feb 82 p 8 GF] SHIRVAN OPIUM DISCOVERY--7'he Islamic revolutionary guards patrol of Faruj discovered 3 kg of opium in an individual's possession. [Tehran .JOrtHURI-YE ESLAMI in Persian 7 Mar 82 p 4 GF] OpIUM SEIZED IN CHABUKSAR--Members of Chabuksar mobilization seized 1 k~ opium from an individual. [Tehran JOMHURI-YE ESLAMI in Persian 7 Mar 82 p 4 GF] l~AR5 DI:UC SE~ZURE--The Sapidan Islamic Revolution Guards patrol has seized l k~ o~~ivm from a Peykan car. The four passengers of the car were arrested - rina handed over. to the authorities. [GF301835 Shiraz Domestic Service in Persian 1500 GMT 29 Mar 82 GF] r1ASSIVE DRUP SWOOP--A group of drug peddlers has been ~rrested in Larestan and 25 kg of opium was seized from their possession. Fasa Islamic Revolution c.;uards recovered 2.2 kg of opium from two persons who ~aere later handed to the authorities. [GF301~i34 Shiraz Domestic Service in Persian 1500 GMT _10 Mar 82 CFJ 44 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 HAMEDAN HEROIN HAUL--The Hamedan anticlrug squad has seized 26.591 kg of heroin from a welding workshop in Hamedan and arrested four persone in this connection. [GF241800 Tehran ETTELA'AT in Persian 1 Mar 82 p 4] MASHHAD OPIUM SEIZURE--The vigilE.nt gendarmerie of Gonabad District has ' recovere d 95.2 kg of opium from inside the tires of a pickup truck. Four traffickers were arrested. [GF241800 Tehran ETTELA'AT in Persian 1 Mar 82 p 4] SMUGGLERS ARRESTED--Members of the "Ahmad Mostajab" group of international drug smugglere have been arrested near Kashan, a.nd 225 kg of opium were seized from them. Some members of the group were killed in the encounter. [GF241800 Tehran ETTELA'AT in Peraian 1 Mar 82 p 4] uitGE DRUG HAUL--The gendarmerie officials of Sistan va Baluchestan Province have seized 126 kg of opium and opium residue during the past 3 days. The guilty persons have been handed over to the authorities. [GF271440 Tehran ETTELA'AT in Persian 14 Mar 82 p 2] GUN, HEROIN SEIZED--The officials of the antidrug squad of Quchan recovered 35 kg of opium, 5 kg heroin and a Colt revolver from a group of smugglers in the hilly areas of Tayyebat. [GF?.71440 Tehran ETTELA'AT in Persian - 14 Mar 82 p 2] OPIi3M SEIZUItE--According to IRNA, the Guards Corps clashed witl-i some smug- glers yesterday in Qal'eh-Kobra village in Torbat--e Jam and seized 97.5 kilos of opium. [Text] [LD23~242 Tehran Domestic Service in Persian 1630 GMT 22 Mar 82] FARS DRUG HAUL--The Central Committee of Fars and Boraz~an has seized 9 kg of opium. The guilty persons have been handed over to the Bushehr Islamic Court. [GF281949 Shiraz Domestic Service in Persian 1500 GMT 28 Mar ~2J CSO: 5300/5377 45 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 SOUTH ArRICA BRIEFS WARNING ON DRUGS--Cape Town--South Africa was experiencing a serious drug problem which was getting worse, the head of the Narcotics Bureau, Colonel Vasie Smit, said yesterday. There had been a swing away from dagga te more dangerous drugs, like Welconel, Mandrax and Cocaine. It was impossible for the police to fight the problem alone and there was an urgent need for the community to adopt a morc~ positive and aggressive attitude.--Sapa ~Text~ ~Johannesburg THE CITIZEN :Ln English 17 Mar 82 p 12] CSO: 5300/5685 ~ 46 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R040500050017-3 AUSTRIA THREE NIGERIANS SENTENCED FOR SMUGGLING MARIHUANA Vienna WIENER ZEITUNG in Gernian 23 Feb 82 p 6 [Text] Three dark-skinned defendants--two men and a woman whose varicolored head-scarf made her seem exotic--who had been in deCention pending trial, were brought bef ore a jury on Monday. They had tried to smuggle 84 kg of marihuana from Lagos, Nigeria, to Vienna by air, and then on to London, on 14 November 1981. Although thQ shipment of drugs was concealed with moth ' balls in all four of their pieces of luggage, a dog used for detecting nar- cotics discovered the drug. All three of them were called upon by Public Pr.osecutor Dr Ernst Kloyber yesterday to defend themselves against charges violating the narcotics law and, in view of the tremendous quantity involved, endangering the public weal, and of attempted smuggling. All three of the Nigerians, who were defended by Dr Peter Philipp and Dr Achim Maurer, admitted that they were guilty to a certain extent. The 44-year-old merchant Sulaiman Ayoade may have been the one who took the lead. He persuaded his friend Afolorunso Adebowale, who is also 44, to accompany him on a smuggling trip to ~urope. Adebowale said yesterday that he had not been aware of the gigantic amount involved until the bags f~lled full of marihuana were checked in at the Lag~s airport. He paid additional charges of the overweight bags. Ayoade asserted that he only transported the marihuana to Europe as a favor for his friend and that he had had nothing to do with buying it. The third defendant, the 28-year-old Mulikat Fasaanski, Ayoade's wife, had kept the keys to the bags used for drug smuggling in her handbag. Nevertheless, her husband, Ayoade, claimed that his wife had not known anyt'~ing about the drug smuggling and that she only wanted to buy clothes in London. That claim was refuted by a teletype message from Interpol which was presented to the court during the trial. The conftscated narcotics represent a value of about 1 million schillings. Adebowale was sentenced to 3 years in prison and Ayoade and Mrs. Fasaanski were both sentenced to 3 and a half years. 9258 CSO: 5300/2220 47 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2407/42/09: CIA-RDP82-40850R000500450017-3 BELGIUM _ NETHERLANDER HELD FOR SMUGGLING HASHISH, ARMS Brussels DE STANDAARD in Dutch 18 Feb 82 p 9 [Article by D.M.: "Drug Merchant Now Also Suspected of Arms Smuggling"] [Text] Deurne--The Netherlander Johannes Fasen (31) from Breda, who was arrested together witti his girlfriend Anthonia Lambregts (29) at the Deurne airport by the state police when 240 kg very gure hashish was found in his private a9.r- plane, at a market value of about 30 million [Belgian] francs, is regarded to be an important drug smuggler. It had been established that he regularly made similar trips between Morocco and the Netherlands. It is said that the reason he landed in Deurne was that there was trouble at the airfield in Seppe (the Netherlands), his usual destination. The - detained Netherlander now has also been found to be under suspicion for arms smuggling. The aircraft, an Air Commander TC14 with Dutch registration PH-REL, landed Saturday evening at the Deurne airf~eld. The state police assigned to guard the airfield subjected the airplane to a close inspection and askzd the pilot Johannes Faser, who was accompanied by his girlfriend and compatriot Anthonia Lanbregts, where they had come from and what their destination was. In answer _ they received a series of coordinates which was not an adequate explanation. The airplane was subjected to a sharp inspection with surprising success. The police found eight packages packed in jute, each weighing 30 kg, consisting of four bricks of very highly refined hashish in plastic bags in each jute package. The ~rade value on the "market" for this quantity of narcotic is about 30 million [Belgian] francs, since it is known thz*_ drug users pay about 125 francs per gram. According to rumor, the man promptly arrested was to have been paid a commission of 10 million francs. The airplane, the drugs and an orange Alfa Romeo Alfasud with Dutch license plates which was parked near the Deurne airfield were impounded by the police. Jerrycans full of flight fuel were also found in the airplane. The machin.e was said to have already landed several times with similar cargo at Deurne. On the basis of the logbook, flight plans and the like, it was 48 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 established that Fasen, who provided a regular connection between Morocco and Seppe, an airfield between Roosendaal and Breda in the Netherlands, followed the coastline on his flights. The detained pilot is a member of a flying club based at Seppe, and had obviously intended to land there last weekend. Presumably he had a message from the Netherlands that the coast was not clear there, and he landed in Duerne, where, as a safety precaution, a car--the Alfa-Romeo--was ready to = finish out the drug shipment over solid ground. The Deurne state police brigade,directed by Deputy Chief Van De St~en,in close cooperation with ttYe detective services of Customs and Communications, is now pursuing an investigation into the business and travels of the Dutch detainees. A trail is alsu said to be being followed which could lead to the --Moroccan?--producers of the narcotics. The drugs impounded will probably wind up in the ovens of the Court in Antwerp. 6940 CSO: 5300/2219 49 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000504050017-3 ] CYPRUS BRIEFS = NARCOTICS IN FAMAGUSTA--While social unrest atemming from the unjust distri- bution of income in our country is mounting, the emuggling and marketing of - narcotics has assumed enormous proportions as a result of the government's failure to take the necessary preventive measures. As we have stated in - our previous issues, those selling narcotics have even managed to infiltrate our high schools. According to information we have obtained, 20 kilograms of - ciarcotics were seized in nylon bags in the Karpas region of Famagusta on 26 March 1982. Meanwhile, another 5 kilograms of narcotics were found last week in the same region. The authnrities are expected to make a atatement on the quantiCy and nature of the narcotics seized. [Excerpt] [NC300900 Lefkosa ~ [Nicosia] SOZ in Turkish 29 Mar 82 p 1] CSO: 5300/5378 50 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000504050017-3 DENMARK INTERIOR MIDTISTER WOULD PROHIBIT GROWING OF HEMP PLANTS Copenhagen BERLINGSKE TIDENDE in Danish 19 Mar 82 p 3 [Text] Interior Minister Henning Rasmussen plans a frontal attack on the Danish production of hashish. This will take place by way of a regular prohibition of the cultivation of hemp plants, which may be used for the prodizction of hashish. The background is reports from the pol~ce districts around the country, stating that the police are unable to prosecute hashish producers becanse the growing of hemp plants is not prohibited,and hemp plants may, moreover, be used as cattle fodder and ornamental plants. So far, the courts have acquitted several persons whom the police suspected of producing hashish. The police, therefore, complain that it is impossible to prove that the y hemp plant is being grown with a view to hashish production. Minister of Justice Ole Espersen over 1 year a~o requested all of the police districts in the country to re~ister hemp growers everywhere in Denmark. Apparently, the Interior Minister is not aware of this. At any rate, he said yesterday to the daily AKTUELT that the Minister of Justice will now activate the local police authorities throughout the countr;~ with a view to re$istering the entire hemp cultivation. The Ministry of Justice confirms to BERLINGSKE TIDENDE that such reg~i.stration took place lon~ ago. _ It would be the Ministry of the Interior and the Ministry of Ju~tice which would have to get together to work out a proposal for le$islation to prohibit tlie growing of hemp plants. 726?_ Cso: 5300/2235 51 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 DENMARK DEATH-DEALING HEROIN SEIZED BY POLICE IN COPENHAGEN Copenhagen BERLINGSKE TIDENDE in Danish 18 Mar 82 p 3 CText~ The Trouble Spottere have saved a 24-year-old narcotics addict from dying after having a highly dangerous heroin shock. Other drug addic~ts are in danger of their lives, the Trouble Spot.ters state. Yesterday, the alarm - was given when the Police Forensic Scienc~: Laboratory found a concentration ~ of 44 percent her.oin in a sample sent in i'or analysis by the Trouble Spotters. It was a question of 1.2 grams of heroin .found by the police last Monday in - three cannular tubes, so-ca]_1ed straws, on a 24-year-old male drug addict _ ~n a flat in Saxo Street. The Tr4uble Spotters call the place a"fixing joint," where several persons were present when the police ap~:eared. The three cannular tubes were seized from the male drug addict, who explained that he had bought them for 2,400 kroner from an unknown pusher in Isted Street. `I'he Troub"le Spotters have just introduced weekly control analyses, paid for by the police. The heroin from Saxo Street was the first drug to be sent in for s!:ch an analysis, Ove Nielsen, po:Lice superintendent states. He i.tli..rodtice~~ this "service" for dru6 addic~ts and treatment centers after at ~Lea:-t 3~leaths in Atxgust af 1981 resulting from the taking of 56 percent - )~el�oin. The normal concentration of heroin sold for injection is 5-10 p~~�-~cent, and the 44 percent of the heroin from Saxo Street may be death- dezling. Yesterday, the Trouble Spotters arrested the 2.~+-year-old drug addict, who was subjected to a prolonged investigation in an attempt to find out who ~f~a;s his supplie.r. The police assume that the highly concentrated drug was p~~~t on the market by mistake, perhaps by some i~norant dealer. The tra~edy -i.~~ August was partly solved, and there were no indications of any intent to 1;i~ll in connection with the sale of the death-dealing heroin, which was rn~~d? to complete].y accidental drug addicts. L~st night, the police suspected a drug-related death at Frederiksberg and ~wo cases of suspended heart action among narcotics addicts at Vanlmse to b~ due to the newly detected death-dealing heroin. - 7?G2 cso: 5300/2235 52 ' APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 DEP:MARK OFFICIAL: SI%TEEN TONS OF METHADONE USED ANNUALLY BY ADDICTS Copenhagen INFORMATION in Danish 23 Feb 82 p 1 [Text] The consumption of inethadone is at least 16 tons a year, distributed on mixture and pills. The consumgtion also includes methadone for treatment of non-dru~ abusers who suffer from chronic pain, and this group is on the increase. This appears from a reply from Dr. Michael von Magnus, chief physician of the National Health Service, printed in the Cnost recent issue of UGESKRIFT FOR LlEGER. The reply follows a provocative article in the same issue in which Karl Vogt- Nielsen of the Anti-Drug Movement challenges the National Health Service. He assumed that the consumption by the 800 drug abusers on methadone maintenance - alone was 18 tons, corresponding to a dope effect of well ov.er 250 kilos of 15 percent heroin, or half the total Danish heroin consumption, according to estimates of the police. - Vogt-Nielsen refere to the report by the liaison committee in which it is stated that only in extremely exceptional cases shall methadone be used for prolonged treatment, and that methadone maintenance for more than 2 years should be avoided. He states, at the same time4 that the number of people on methadone maintenance over a prolonged period of time is, at the moment, larger than the number of patients being treated without drugs, and that more than half of the - drug abusers in Copenhagen have received methadone for mere than 2 years. He also points out that there are departures from the purposes contained in the circular of the National Health Service, according to which circular methadone shall be taken under supervision, regular uroscopies shall be undertaken to ensure that methadone does not end up in the illegal market, and that the drug addict does not take other drugs simultaneously with methadone. "Defeats Its Own 1'urpose" _ Vogy-Nielsen thus maintains that physicians leave it to dru$ abusers themseives to administer the methadone, that there are permanent places in Copenhagen where the drug is being traded, and that the methadone may be purchased practically everywhere, and at fixed prices. F~irthermore, he states that drug abusers often cheat on their urine specimens by adding ascorbic acid, that not a single urine specimen analysis has been undertaken in Copenhagen, and that the 53 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 P4ixi~icipal Council of Copenhagen has voted down a proposal to undertake such ana~ysee at regular intervals. "It~ our� opinion, the administration of inethadone has completely defeated its own purpose," he writes. I~r. Michael von Magnus, chief physician, maintains that methadone is a"valuable - supplement" in the treatment of certain drug abusers, that the number of drug abu~sers on methadone maintenance for a short or a longer period of time has not increased since 1.979, and that the number of drug addicts who have been on methadone for more than 6 months is the same as in 1979� As for the circular of the National Health Service, the chief physician states that the most i.^.!p~rtant thing has been to stress the responsibility on the part of' the general practitioner to ensure proper treatment. The rest is ~ question of ~ gizideline~--which, however, in the circular, are provided with a modest "should." But none o~' these pdints may be conceived as absolutes. The National Health Service has previously informed physicians that urine specimens may be omitted, - as there have been problems having them performed at a reasonable cost. Von Magnus states that the fact that methadone is not being used in Norway--nor in the county of Ribe--as pointed out by Vo~t-Nielsen, is not comparable with the ~eneral Danish problems in the area. He states that the problems of insufficient resources for treatment are not being solved either by "unilaterally criticizing the use of inethadone in the treatment of drug abusers in cases where thi.s is the only realistic possibility in the specific situation." Ilnjizstified Criticism ~ The National Heal.th Service, moreover, finds it unjustified to criticize the ,r;eneral practitioner for usin~r methadone in the treatment of drug abusers, seein~ t}lat "the treatment i.nstitutions; to a large extent, have refused to use any mett~adone at all in their treatment of patients, and seeing that, in the individ- ual. ca~es, there have been no other relevant possibilities of treating tt~e patients, and where pr.escribing methadone for use during a prolonged period of time mighl; be relevant," the chief physician writes. 7?6 CSC: 53oo/2z28 54 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 DENMARK DANISH, NO~tWEGIAN POLICEt OVER A TON OF HASHISH FROM NEEAL Oslo ARBEIDERBLADET in Norwegian 3 Mar 82 p 9 [Article by Helge Aamotsbakke*~~ [Text] Norwegian and Danish narcotics police believe that an international gang has smuggled 1.1 ton hashish into the tdordic countries since last summer. Presumably, the tot~l amount never wi11 become known. Customs officers are unable to check the enormous amount of freight sEnt by way of Kastrup Airport. The hashish has been sent by air freight from Karachi, Pakistan. It originates in Nepal and is of the finest quality on the market. So far, Danish police have made three hashish seizures at Kastrup Airport outside Copenhagen. The first seizure, which was in a crate addressed to the B&W Shipyard, weighed 216 kg. Last January narcotics police seized another B&W crate. This time 100 kg hashish was confiscated. Last: weekend the police and customs officers made yet another seizure, again weighing 216 kg. - Norwegian narcotics poZice have made few comments on this case~. Chief of narcotics police, inspector Arne Huuse, told DAGBLADET, however, that the case has been given high priority. "Apart from the fact that last Tuesday we arrested a 24 year old Norwegian man in connection with this case, that he is charged with hashish smuggling, and that the quantity smuggled to Norway is relatively small by the standards of this case, I will not discuss the case further, due to the ongoing investi- gation," Arne Huuse said. Commissioner Bent Hansen of the narcotics police in Copenhagen told DAGBLADET: "We made the arrest after a long and intense investigation with 10 men in the field," commissioner Bent Hansen of the Danish narcotics police in Copenhagen told DAGBLADET. "So far we have made three seizures, but our investigation has revealed that at least six shipments have arrived." "The invoices, which were falsified, indicate three other shipments." 9336 CSO: 5300/2214 55 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R040500050017-3 DENMARK WELFARE ~IRDCTOR: STOP UNEMPLOYMENT, DISABILITY AID TO USERS - Copenhagen BERLINGSKE TIDENDE in Danish 16 Mar 82 p 3 [Text] " Dru$ abusers should neither have unemployment benefits nor sick leave benefits. It will have to be a hell to be a drug addict so that it becomes attractive to receive slow withdrawal treatment." The above statement was made by Lars Lundgaard, county welfare director and chairman of the government's youth committee, at the annual meeting yester- day of the Crime Prevention Council. He warned against the so-called "si.lver platter principle": - "Kindliness and half-heartedness toward drug abusers often become a = hindrance in the treatr~ent. I would wElcome consistent application of the rules and regulations on the part of the welfare and labor market authori- ties. In this way, 75 percent of the drug abusers will within a reasonable time get in touch with a treatment center. And they will carry through the slow withdrawal treatment." Lar; Lun~igaard presented his views during the debate on perspect9.ves in the c~~mr~ing years' anti-drug efforts. The chief of the Copenhagen Narcotics ['~~iice, Bent Ejlerskov Petersen, criticized the politicians for lacking the will to eradicate narcotics: _ "What is the use for the police to be allocated additional resources, when, for example, the customs authorities are unable to make an effort to put an end to the smuggling of dru$s into the country? Those responsible do not - plan any joint action, and the politicians have not laid down any superior abjectives. Denmark is w~.thout any anti-drug policy. Each krone, each million s~ent in the efforts of the police to fight narcotics crimes are w~sted~ like the money thrown into the vessel of the Danaides.'~ 7'he council yesterday presented a comprehensive information campaign fi- nanced for 800,000 krox~er, ~ran~ed by the Society of Insurers. 7262 , Cso: 5300/2235 , - 56 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 DENMARK FOLKETING MAJORITY PREVENTS ACTION TO CLOSE CIiRISTIANIA Copenhagen BERLINGSKE TIDENDE in Danish 17 Mar 82 p 2 [Text] There is every indication that "the Free City of Christiania" will remain in existence as an"alternative urban society'~ for an indefinite period of time, Proposals for its liquidation and clearance cannot be , carried through for political reasons. However, the debate in the Folke- - ting yesterday confirmed wishes on the part of the government and the Folketing for what they call a'~legalization" of the conditions, and this will be the basis for the continued existence of Christiania. A r~ajority in the Folketing take notice of Minister for the Environment - Erik Holst's report on the Christiania area. In the said report, which makes use of the draft by the consultin$ firm of Mmller & Grmnborg for the future use of Christiania, the minister assumes that plans will be made of the area, and that this will take place in a process concurrently with, and integrated in, an att~mpt to change the society of Christiania. The idea is thus that the general rules of the Danish society shall apply to the area. The hashish market will be removed, it is stated. The licensing and value-added-tax conditions cf the pubs must be put in order. Buildings and installations must become legalized, and the health and environmental regulations must be complied with. The dangerous �ramshackle buildings must be demolished, and the houses worth preserving must be restorPd. In the course of the very long debate yesterday in the Folketing, Agnete Laustsen (Conservative Party) stated in response to the report by the minister that the statement now being made that Christiania was to continue but subject to the general laws of the society was reminiscent of statements made earlier. The legalization of the area which was to be the basis had not been fulfilled--on the con~rary. There was no reason whatever to be- ' lieve that it would now really happen, and that the government would take action. During the debate, Minister for the Environment Erik Holst made it quite clear that the government cannot advocate clearing of Christiania, and his views were supported by the Social Democratic Party, as well as by the Socialist People's Party and the Radical Liberal Party. Ebba Strange 57 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00854R000540050017-3 (Socialist People's Party) found it valuable to operate with alternative ways of life ar.d forms of society, and Tage Draebye (Radical Liberal Party) _ stated that Christiania will have to be supported, but that certain demands - will. also have to be made of Christiania. The spokesman for the Progressive Party, Knud Lind, who said that the govern- ment had, for a decade, been cherishing a vipor in its bosom, moved the following resolution on behalf of five parties (the Conservative r:~rty, the Liberal Party, the Pro$ressive Party, the Center Democrats and the Christian People's Party): '~As the conditions in the Christiania area must still be regarded as unacceptable, especially with regard to the social and crime- producing conditions, the Folketing requests the government--in accordance with the jud~ement of the Supreme Court passed on 2 February 1978--to take - the necessary steps immediately for closing of Christi~nia by the end of - 1g82_.'? This resolution was defeated as the majority adopted the resolution taking cogniZance of the report by the minister. 7?62 cso: 5300/2235 ~ 58 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000504050017-3 - DENMAFtK REPORTER VISITS CHRISTIANIA, FINDS HASHISH SOLD OPENLY Copenhagen BERLINGSKE TIDENDE in Danish 16 Mar 82 Sec II p 1 CArticle by Henrik Grunnet7 [Text] Hashish is being sold openly, even by 13-year-old girls, in the free city which likes to call itself "the village of the ~ big city," but which has become a village with all of the weak- nesses of the bi$ city. The air is suddenly pierced by the shrill blasts of 20-30 boatswain's . pipes. It is the internal alarm signal of Christiania, which means that the police are on their way: In a matter of seconds, the entire Pusher Street, as this part of Christiania's only actual street is called, is cleared. Left are the unsuspecting buyers of hashish, who now become the only people caught by the police. It is 4 o'clock in the afternoon. It is a weekend~ and spring has come to Christiania. Pusher Street, the name of which clearly implies what happens on this street, has been marked by brisk activity since the early morning hours. A crowd of schoolboys has gathered around a seller, evaluating his "wares." They feel and smell at the hashish before deciding to buy it. "Have you also got black aphan," asks one of the boys who has heard that black aphan is the strongest kind of hashish on the market. The pusher answers in the negative by shaking his head but refers to a colleague who, at the moment, is in the process of selling a large quantity to a Swede, "but you should rather buy from cne, for the black aphan is fu3~.~of plastic and is bad to smoke," the pusher says. They do not hide anything. The traffic in hashish is taking place quite openly, and they pay no attention to the fact that it is actually prohibited in the Danish society. The fact that the alarm signal has been sounded does not mean that the traffic has been interrupted but only that the pushers now disappear from Pusher Street, withdrawing to the pubs around the street where the traffic continues as briskly as before. If the police enter one of the pubs, the pushers disappear out of the back doors to continue the traffic in another pub. 59 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 Woodstock is one of the pubs at Christiania where the traffic in hashish may run into several hundred thousand kroner a day. 13-Year-Old Pusher The sweet smell of hashish mixes with the stench of beer and vomit. Dogs of undefinable breeds dart in and out among the legs of the customers on the filthy floor. But nobody seems to pay any attention ~o them or to the surroundings for that matter. Most of the regular r,ustomers of the pub - sit, a dull expression in their eyes, looking vacantly into the air. They are waiting for the r.ext pipe of hashish. Only the pushers seem to be interested in what is ~oing on around them. As soon as a new customer enters ~che room, he/she is being showered with offers of all kinds oi hash~sh. ~ Tn a corner of the pub, a 13-year-old girl is sitting. On her lap is her 5-year-old sister, who slurps a coke. On the table in front of the girl is a big sheet of hashish. A piece is broken off and is carefully weighed on a small spring balance before the girl hands it to the customer. Out of her pocket slle pulls a big bundle of 100 kroner notes, and with an indifference as if it were a ba~ of candy, she counts the notes and gives - back on a 1,000 kroner note. The current price for 1 gram of hashish is 50 kroner. Around the room one notices several hundred grams of hashish changing hands. It is. _ primarily Swedes and Norwe~ians who purchase such large quantities, and these purchases take place with a view to resale in the home countries. Tn mo~t places, only 2_~3 gr.ams are sold at a time, and the buyers are youn~; people who have clubbed to~ether for a weekend of fun and escape from reality. f~oth the police a?~d the politicians recognize the fact that only h.ashish is beir.g so].d at Chr.istiania today. Takin$ the law into 1-h~i.r o~an hands and through s~L-ri.ct measures, the inhabitants of Christiania - h~ave mar~a~ed to piat a stop to al1 traffic in hard dru~s in the free city. H.~i�d dr~~i~; dealers who turn up at Christiania are being thrown bodily out r~r~;~in. However., the problern has not moved far away. At the pubs immediate- o~~i:si.de Ch~~i_sti~n~.1, t.he traffic in hard drugs is taking place nearly openly as the traffic in hashish in the free city. ]~~verywhe.re within Christiania one sees more or less ramshackle houses, the for.mer mil:itary barracks. The~e now hold the permanent residents of C}lristiania who each of them have arran~ed their own flats or who live tot;ether in collectives. It is not as previously possible for just any- r~od,y to visit these flats. The doors are locked, and the pri~~ate owner- ::hip is strictl,y observed. But, at the same time, this has meant that ~r,:~n,y .fl.ats are in a condition fully corresponding to what one will find at ~d~,~rrebro and. 0st~rbro. All occupants repor+ed (800-1,000) pay 250 kroner ii~ r.ent, w}iich ~oes toward Christiania's water, power and heat bills. ~i'he many Greenlanders at Christiania have to live in their own buildin$, "th? Star Ship." A ghetto within the ghetto, one might feel, but the 60 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 residents of Christiania are of th~ opinion that the Greenland culture, in too rnany respecte, is incompatible witYi their own. However, Christiania is more than old military barracks. On the ramparts of Christianshavn, one may experience an environment which comes close to real village idyl. Here are some of the most beautiful areas in Copen- hagen, and, at this late afternoon hour, people of all ages are sitting or lyir.g down, enjoying the last rays of sunshine of the day. Restaurant Life Outside a ramshackle houss is an enormous heap of old, rizsty bicycle parts as well as a few complete bicy~les. Above the door is a boaxd explaining the presence of the bioycles: "Have the cops taken your bicycle? Buy completely honest bicycles here. We make them ourselves." Next to the bic,ycle maker is a grocery store, and here the residents of Christiania buy all of their daily needs right from curative apricot juice to Christiania's own weekly newspaper. The goods are expensive, but one has a cozy time, and the people rzll talk with one another. In a corner of the free city is a combined pub and restaurant with the imap;inative riame of "the Moonfi~her." Here, food is being served between - 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. At a first glance, ~he environment is the same as in the pu~s around Pusher Street, but on examining the place more closely, one notices important differences. The floor and the tables are clean, ~nd the hup;e, home-made wrought-iron fire place in the center of the room is actually somethin~ of an architectural master piece. On the plentifully ~ equipped bar are the papers of the day ~including BERLINGSKE TIDENDE). T.he menu card, with which one is presented as soon as one has sat down, is varied. Right from vsgetable soup at 15 kroner to sirloin steak at 50 kroner. During moments when one succeeds in forget~ing that the kitchen has never been inspected by the health control authorities, i;he sir~oin steak tastes _ excellently and the Beaujolais wine at 50 kroner is splendid. - No wonder that the food is cheap,for here they pay no taxes, value-added- taxes or duties. After a quick calculation, one arrives at the conclusion that if the pubs were to pay these taxes and duties, and still make ~he same profits, the prices would have to be more than twice as high. It is not only throu~h hashish traffic that easy money is made. Christiania which once was a free city for hopeful young people with alternative ideas of socie+y, has become a ghetto with enormous problems of sanitation and restorat_�~n, with a just as big class division as the society outside and where buses filled with tourists are nn equally daily event to the residents of Christiania as to the animals in the Copenhagen Zoo. 61 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2407/42/09: CIA-RDP82-40850R000500450017-3 Ai. the exit of Chris~;iania are around a dozen booths, selling everything, - ri~;ht from handcarved hashish pipes to picture postcards of Christiania. With or without ~he willingness of the residents, the free city of Christi.ania has become a market for commercial interests. "A village with- . in the big city," the residents of Christiania like to call the area, bu.t it is a village with all of the weaknesses of the big city. 7262 CSO: 5300/2235 62 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2447/02/09: CIA-RDP82-44850R444544454417-3 - DENMARK POI,ICE ASSERT CHRISTIANIA IS DENMARK'S HASHISH CENTER Copenhagen BERLINGSKE TIDENDE in Danish 7 Mar 82 p 3 - CArticle by Anders Wiig] [Text] The traffic in hashish at Christiania is a bu~iness involving millions of kroner. The extent of the traffic may be known by the ~rincipals controlling it and fetching the huge profits. Minister of Justice Ole Espersen estimates that 3-4 kilos are traded on a daily basis. That gives - an annual turn.over of 54-73 million kroner. Accordin~ to the "Architect's Report," a group of residents of Christiania estimate that there is a daily turnover of 20 kilos--at 50 kroner per gram, this becomes 365 million kro.ner annually. The Trouble Spotters estimate the daily turnover at 10-15 kilos-- an annual turnover of between 182 and 273 million kroner. "I do not know on what the minister bases his estimate. But regardless of when we get out there, from the early morning to the late night hours, we invariably find a brisk turnover of hashish. We base our estimate of 10-15 kilos on the seizures which we manage to make when undertaking our 15-20 miiiutes of spot checks 2-3 times a week, at a maximum. In order to get hold of the hashish, we have to get into Christiania without being noticed. `1'he residents of Christiania have got an efficient alarm system, involving ho.^tswain's pipes, which may be heard everywh.ere as soon as we are observed. That ~ives the pushers enough time to remove the hashish from Pusher Street and about a dozen pubs. We, typically, seize 200-400 grams per spot check, ~ seized on several people. It would be unrealistic to assume that these fi~ures would be an indication of the actual turnover," Ove Nielsen, police si~perintendent of the Trouble Spotters, states with reference to the claim from the chairman of the legal committee, Jimmy Stahr, to the effect that only 10 percent of the traffic in hashish in Copenhagen is taking place at Christiania. In the news broadcast on the radio last ni~ht, Jimmy Stahr attacked Ole Nmr~aard, deputy commissioner of the Copenhagen Police for dabblin~ in politics and using an unpleasant tone in maintaining that Jimmy Stahr had misunderstood the situation with regard to the traffic in hashish ai; Christiania. Ove Nielsen, police superintendent, has no hesitation in referring to Christiania as the only hashish market of Copenhagen. On the traffic 63 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 ~.akirig pl.zce in other areas, he say,~: "It is not at all on the same scale. Tt may be a question of minor transt~ctions among friends, involving 10-20 ~rarns of hashish traded in a pub--and often this hashish ori$inates in Christiani.a. Some months ago, we had a bit of hashish traffic in the Saxo F'ark at Vesterbro, but we put an end to that in 2 weeks.'~ 2uestion: Why, then, do you not put a stop to the traffic at Christiania? Answer: It is impossible to check the area effectively. It is a closed ,ociety with extremely efficient alarm systems. The working conditiors of t:he police are hopeless--16 police officers were injured out there in 1981. _ It 9_s the most difficult area for the police to work in of all of the Copenha~en areas. ~ls thin~s are, we cannot stop the traffic throu~h normal checl:s in the a.rea. Thai; k~ould require enormous resources. Each ttime i;hat we check the area w~ need to send 25 officers out there, including two ~roups he1c~ in readiness to have the rear covered. It is al.most impossible for the po].ice to penetrate into a closed criminal cornmunity. (~~~estion: Would you describe Christiania as a closed criminal community? Ariswer. Definitely: For one thin~, there is the large traffic in hashish, Cor the other, there is the traffic in stolen goods. Oize may ask oneself 1he question: Who makes a11 the money on the hashish traffic? I do not be- :L~ev~ t:hat the hig rnoney is made by the small dealer and the semi-criminals Foimd out there. C; ;0: 5 500/~ >5 , 64 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 I ~ I ~ FT'~D L RF~'UBLIC OF Gi~1~h9l1PdY -I I L,..',t1i),;[t Or' i~'RANICPURT UHUG RING GOES ON TRIAL ; i!~~mbur~; D:~t ~YII~IGLL in German 1 Mar 82 66,69 Tcx] Jo:.;eF~h "13ig Joe~~ Amiel, an Israeli, is on trial in Frank- furt. Iic: is regaxded as the leader of the largest drug ring ever brolcen up on the Main. - Young female addicts who smuggled the dope from Amsterdam across the bord.er t ~ ~ ~ 4~i ~~~'.1..- ~i ~ ' `i ..'1. . , , , ~ obeyed his every command. Investigators `~'`;t~''~-;i?~':~ listened in on these orders over tlie te1~- f,*,~:.ii ~~~''~ni~:'~~~ tt ~I ,~,;,;,i phone: a fcw grai.ns in somc paper, . r' `;l;; a small packet in the mouth, ~~the grec:n 4:':, _ . ~~'Gi � ones on the body under the panties"; or a even six like a tampon, internally. , a.~~ . ~t '1,' f 4 Others obeyed Joseph "Big Joe~~ Amie:l as ~t~' well. His brother Nissim, for instancc, - sold the hcroin in and around the ~r~.nk- �ur~t railroad station to suppor~; his own habit~ because ~~he didn~t give him any- thing,~~ as a prostitute told the policc:. And if anyone evcr entertair.~;d any idea.:~ ~ about doing business on his own, thougYit;,� of terrible things kept him from i~t. "I' d~ct a bu1 Let in the head, ~~as wha~l; 1)c~fendant llmicl Simon �Kuschi~~ Rimon feared~ so he utaycd on with th e bo s s. "Idever used a grfzm" . The tavern o~mer from `i'el llviv had risen to the position of ~~king of drugs~~ on the ~ Main (FFi.ANKFUR.Ti~ ~RUIdDSCHAU). As befitted ,i;~. ;~.t>~~ved thc Amcricans in thc ~ccoration. E~~rt IS tons of cannabis, plcadecl liabit," A survcY by thc 33 R C pro- :~uilt'v at thr Cenlral Criminal .fust a year or so :ago, ~`mcrica's �~~'ammr, "Mid~veck " in l')73 f'n~~rt lo h^in;! p,u�t oC an inter- 1,nnn;s ffonn; J~~unNni, i�cportc~l ~stimated that four million pcnnl~� I hat " many ~Vashin~ton part.ics in Britain had tricd cannahis. 'I'hr figurc, I guess, is aboul doub]c that no~~~. C`;r): 53"?0/2?. ~ . 86 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2447/02/09: CIA-RDP82-44850R444544454417-3 UNITED KINGDOM HOME OFFICE NOTES INCREASE IN NUMBER OF DRUG ADDICTS London THE DAILY TELEGRAPH in English 24 Feb 82 p 2 [Article by David Fletcher] [Text] ~ ~ 0 U N G pcoplc cau~lit ~~p ~ i~l tlie In a statemen.t, Rcleasc ~aid that Facilitics for helping and 11I1GI11pI0yCIlClll' ,."~,100171 ~CC tl1T'IIill~; ~0 treatin�g ~eroin addicts~~ tvcrc not only inadequate but hape� 1lCTOlri t0 e5cape 1~1C1I' depression, . a (~I'U�~; ]essly overwhelmed." advice gCOU~ Shc(~ It predicted a massfve prob= Mr Boh NiQhtin~ale, spol:es- lem over heroin' usc in Britain yesterday: man, said: " it's a rlrspair amonfi unless priorities wcrc revised. the voung which makes oblivion The warning was erhoed bY 1'hey pCCfer the " Care� much niore desirable, bhe Standing ' Conference an frec Obliviott " the drub Iieroin makc9 .you far~et llrug Abuse, another group - about things far a w�hilc, ~nd w~ieh woCk~t With drug~ablr.m induces to the despair of c~ses.. , pc~plc wan~t that morc now bc- the dole c~ueue. cause their life is~ no~ en.ioy It said time had al.most run llnd a continuin~ incrcase ablc as it was l0,yc,.rs a~o." out.for many drirg addiots bc- Uscrs, of fioth scxrs, rangcd ~~~se of lack of Gm~errrment in thc~ alrcady " starllin~; " action. ' numbcr of hard�dru~ uscrs ~n agc from around~ 14 to 40, Mr David Turncr, Caordina- is iucvit~ible, il~c Relcasc and spanned al! social classes. tor of thc Shending Confcrencc group said. ~ Turned to theft said thcre had bcen a reduc tion in services av~ila�ble to 'Thc ~varning follows thc P~~h� ~Addictiort led~ to vast expcnsc, pevplo �dependent on dru~s lic�:~tion of }lome O(lice li~ures said~ Mr Nightingale, ancl some largel,y because of publie sr~nd- which rrveal an incrcasc of youn~stcrs wcrc havin~ to rc= ing cuts. about a third ~'rn t6e numbcc oF sort to theft pr prosti~ution to notified add~icts in one ycar. nance the hahit.,'.Othcrs sold - Thc Homc Officc said about drugs o. pay fon c~roin, cur- 3,600 wcrcreceiving dru~s from rentl.y about �SO' a~ramme. cloctars to tmat thcir add~iot~ion Addicts usc~ ~t quarter or half at the end of last ycar. At the a gramme a day. - cnd of 19D0 thc figurc was 'l,8AG Thc Home ~ Officc fi~ures' rc - mnp` tl~an a~t anv time over corded only those addicts who thc prr.vinus 10 years. wcrc notified to the authoritics. Tlut Rclcase said thc truc Thcrcforc, said Mr Nightin� numbcr of hard drua addicts ~alc, t~he,y represented onl,y ~ was in~~rc iikc 30AOQ " at a con� Pro~rt~ion of , the rcal risc in scrvat'rvc cstimatc." ~ ~a~s"aa~~ci e d u~gsso oE the CSO: 5320/22 87 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R400540050017-3 UNITED KINGDOM DRUG SMUGGL~R MARKS .TAILED FOR THREE YEARS London THE DAILY TELEGRAPH in English 17 Feb 82 p 3 [Article by Ian Henry] [Text] ~UIVAWAY cli�ti~ si:~u~;lei' DI;?VNIS HOWAFD .Di'l~~'3 I~.iddera , n-1.~n~:s, ~-ho Uccame entangled up in a~ in, speakers ~~~eb of international intri~ue whilc worlcinb for British intelli encc, was finall ailed for Yesc~~aay LORD .}~LTCHINSON, ~ y ~ Q C, for 114arks, told of D4arks' tl~ree years at the Old 13~iley yesterday. iindercaver' intetligence ~~~ork ~nd wliy he disappeared and ~4arks, ~G, uie ~~Velsh villa;c boy ~vho became an failed. to a~ctcnd l~is original OYford raduate and turned to dru smu ~lin as a trial. b g5 R~r JONN RO::ERS, prosecut- r.over for his M I G work, smiled and waved to his wife i~~g, said that in 1s75 Marks .}vas one of a group of Cnglish- JUdith as he left the court. men who smuggled cannabis i.ast November Marks ~vas f?�om Europe to tl~c United cleared of mastecmindinr 1'he 1'hames VaI1eY Policeman States. a lot to sinu;gle 15 tons cif ~~ho carricd out thc inryuiry, The smugglers operated " P Suut Philip Fairwcathcr, coni� throu~h a front company, Trans- rannahis, worth �22 millian, n,itte~ suicidc after allegedly atlantic Sound, with a false t~~ .i r~mote Scottish island. confessing to I~a~~in~ lealced his address in Brook Stret, Mayfair. 11~� ~r;~s jailcd for two .ycars rcport to a,iournahst. Thc compan,y "mana~ed" a f~~r p;~�si~urt ut'I~nces. I:xtracts from the report non�existent group. Roc:k bands l r;~rnl,~~. mor~~ t~~:~n ci;;ht ~PPeared in the New STA7'ES� GkC IO usc thcir crwn soimd c~~,~~. ,ifl~�r bein~ nri~inallv Mnrv in ]979. Last Dcccnrbcr cryuipment, and anrpi{etiers arc ,~,i~~~t~~d in llulland I~~r dc~~~; Supt 1'airweather stabbecl him� ideal for concealing eannabis. ti,1iu:~iin;, \tarks, nf C~~thcart sclf to death in thc garden of The cabinets ow.ned by Trans� lio~~t. i~ulham, p~~~~dcd ~uiltv to his home in Kidlington, Oxford.� atlantic Sound were speciallY cnn~piracy in 1973 to r.v~de He had aceepted responsibil� built in PuCne,y to conoeal 1001b :1~m�~ic~~'s l;iws on drugs impor� ity for the New STATF.SMAN of cannabis. Thc "band" ob� i,,i;un, lealc, and according to rolice tained custorns documents from sources, was expecting to be Italv, Sw~itzerland, Austria, Hol- j~~~~j~p�lp~t'~ chargecl under the O~icial sec� l;ind, Ireland, France, America - rets Act. At thc inqucst last montl~, it and Uritain, for tl~e import and ~r�ul nu char~es liad ~bccn ~ ~,ntn� ~~.iIL" IndrlC. Cso: 5320/22 Frrn 90 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500050017-3