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CARRIBEAN, CENTRAL, AND SOUTH AMERICA



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CARRIBEAN, CENTRAL, AND SOUTH AMERICA




    1. Brazilian Cops Nab Rio’s Most Wanted Drug Kingpin (BR)

11 November 2011

Latin American Herald Tribune
RIO DE JANEIRO – Antonio Bonfim Lopes, reputed boss of the drug gang that controls the sprawling Rio slum of Rocinha, was arrested by Brazilian police in the wee hours of Thursday.
Lopes, known as “Nem,” was taken to prison in an armored vehicle and streets were closed to traffic as the police convoy made its way through Brazil’s second-largest city.
“It is a victory for everyone,” the commander of the Rio de Janeiro state police, Col. Erir Ribeiro Costa Filho, said of the arrest, while state Gov. Sergio Cabral announced that security forces will move into Rocinha on Sunday to re-establish the rule of law.
Lopes was apprehended after a car carrying two of his men was stopped at a police checkpoint in Lagoa, an affluent area neighboring Rocinha.
Claiming to be employees of the Congolese Consulate in Rio, the two men invoked diplomatic immunity and refused to allow a search of the vehicle, Costa Filho said.
Cops then escorted the car to the regional headquarters of the Federal Police, where the men’s story was checked and found to be false.
Police searched the car and discovered Lopes hiding in the trunk.
Lopes and his men offered the police up to 1 million reais ($571,000) to release them, Costa Filho said.
“The detainee arrived at police headquarters apparently calm and aware of his situation,” Victor Poubel of the Federal Police told a press conference. “Later, he called his mother to tell her he had been arrested and asked that his children be taken to school today.”
Authorities started preparing days ago for the planned occupation of Rocinha, a “favela” of some 70,000 people perched on hilltops amid several upscale neighborhoods.
As the siege tightened, five suspected drug dealers and an equal number of retired and active-duty police thought to be working for the traffickers were arrested as they tried to flee Rocinha.
Security forces have driven drug gangs out of a score of Rio favalas since late 2008 as part of a strategy that calls for the permanent stationing of large police units in the reclaimed areas.
In each case, the occupation has been preceded by raids to arrest dealers and seize drugs and guns, a measure aimed at averting deadly shootouts when the main body of the police arrive.
With Rio de Janeiro set to serve as a venue for the 2014 soccer World Cup and to host the 2016 Olympics, Brazilian authorities are anxious to end the drug gangs’ dominance in the favelas and bring crime under control. EFE
Source: [www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=442216&CategoryId=14090]

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    1. DEA Commando Teams Deployed in Central America (DR/GT/BZ/HN)

11 November 2011 00:01



InSight Crime
In an effort to increase its capacity to crack down on Latin American drug syndicates, the U.S. government has set up a handful of DEA commando teams to carry out attacks across Central America and the Caribbean.
As The New York Times reported earlier this week, the so-called FAST teams, which is short for Foreign-deployed Advisory Support Team, were initially established in 2008 to go after drug traffickers in Afghanistan, but have since been deployed much closer to home.
“The DEA [Drug Enforcement Administration] now has five commando-style squads it has been quietly deploying for the past several years to Western Hemisphere nations — including Haiti, Honduras, the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, and Belize — that are battling drug cartels, according to documents and interviews with law enforcement officials,” the newspaper writes.
The role of the groups, which each number ten agents, is not one of passive observation. As the Times reports, one of the FAST teams participated in a recent gunfight in Honduras in which two alleged drug traffickers were killed, and one Honduran security official was wounded.
The U.S. government has long played a direct, though covert, role in combating drug traffickers in their home countries, and the FAST teams are in many ways the heir to that tradition.
As the author documented in his book Killing Pablo, soldiers with the U.S. Army were instrumental in the effort to track down and ultimately kill Pablo Escobar, the erstwhile head of Colombia’s Medellin Cartel and considered by many to be the most powerful drug trafficker in history. More recently, the DEA played a significant role in the tracking of Mexican boss Arturo Beltran Leyva, who was killed in a shootout with Mexican marines in December 2009. Additionally, a program similar to FAST was used in Peru and Bolivia in the 1980s.
Despite the long history of similar efforts, the deployment of the FAST teams is not without its risks. One is that of a nationalist backlash. While the nations mentioned may not be as automatically suspicious of American designs as Mexico, reports of U.S. agents running around the country are likely to inspire resentment, especially if there is any collateral damage.
U.S. security agencies also have a long history of abuse in Central America. The U.S. military was instrumental in training the death squads that terrorized much of the isthmus during the 1980s, but the widespread ill repute of the gringo empire extends back far longer; American troops carried out scores of occupations of different Central American nations during the 20th century. In one of the more recently disclosed examples of American misconduct, government scientists infected more than 700 Guatemalans with syphilis during the 1940s. The lingering cloud of such a history could make local populations more suspicious of the FAST teams.
Since the FAST teams are also carrying out a training function, it is worth asking what kind of vetting process will accompany the enhanced skills imparted to the local agents. In the past, U.S.-trained units in Mexico and elsewhere have subsequently deserted so as to work for illegal gangs. The Times report offers no indication of any defections, but nor does it say that there have not been any such incidents. Furthermore, the program has only been in place for three years, so this is a problem that could emerge well into the future.
It is also not clear that the FAST teams represent a significant attempt to address the deeper defects in state function that allow the drug trade to flourish in Central America. While the ability to track a wanted trafficker or win a firefight against superior numbers is both exciting and useful, these are ultimately insignificant compared to the larger obstacles, such as an inefficient trial system, a dysfunctional prison network, a weak labor market, and paltry tax collection. The FAST teams’ training could play a role in creating marginally more capable local security forces, but even in a best-case scenario, with such small teams, the overall impact would be negligible.
Finally, as analysts have pointed out, the lack of openness of the FAST program continues an unfortunate pattern. Time and again in recent years, official schemes to crack down on organized crime have been initiated in a veil of secrecy that is eventually breached, leaving everyone involved with egg on their face. Sometimes, the plan itself is not so horribly conceived--the U.S. drone flights over Mexican territory, which were made public earlier this year, is a good example of that. In other cases, such as the ongoing Fast and Furious scandal, the programs were ill-planned, and the secrecy allowed a poor idea to become a reality.
But in all of the cases, the fallout is worse because the governments initially tried to keep them secret. A bit of secrecy is certainly required in counter-drug operations, but too often, the clandestine nature of a given program stems more from habit than necessity.
Source: [insightcrime.org/insight-latest-news/item/1831-dea-commando-teams-deployed-in-central-america]

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