Belize, a paradise for tourists and drug traffickers

“Belize is a transit point for cocaine shipments,” Commander Anastacio Garcia, who heads the military in the Mexican state of Quintana Roo that borders onto Belize, recently told reporters.

The commander of the Mexican army’s naval zone number 5, Conrado Aparicio, confirmed drug trafficking over land and by sea had increased in Quintana Roo.

He also highlighted trafficking along the border between Belize and Guatemala, done in such a way, he noted, that only small quantities of narcotics are smuggled at a time.

“The cartels have local contacts, they pay in drugs and weapons,” said a local agent who requested anonymity. “Some supply fuel to planes or speedboats and serve as guides so the drugs can be moved on to Mexico.”

In 2011, Belize made its debut on a US list of “major drug transit or major illicit drug producing countries.”

According to the US State Department, cartels expedite narcotics to the United States via Mexico using tiny Belize as a stopover point for drugs coming from Colombia, Peru and Ecuador. The amount of cocaine passing through Belize has been estimated at 10 tonnes per year.

In its 2012 International Narcotics Control Strategy Report, the State Department said Belize’s remote jungles “provided a hospitable environment for growing cannabis” last year and that drug trafficking and related crimes increasingly threatened the state’s stability.

“Without action and redress, Belize’s security environment will continue to deteriorate,” the report said, urging the country, among other things, to beef up its border security.

By placing a greater emphasis on institution and capacity building, Belize will be “more capable of successfully confronting illegal drug trafficking,” it added.

In April, a plane carrying cocaine crashed in the jungle close to Corozal, not far from the Mexican border. Local media reports said those on board were able to escape with their load before police arrived, illustrating the weakness of law enforcement.

With a poverty rate near 40 percent, this undeveloped country has in recent years become more and more prone to violence.

According to the United Nations, Belize was considered among the most dangerous in the Americas, with a homicide rate of 41.7 per 100,000 people in this nation of just 330,000. In Belize City, the economic capital, criminal gangs are becoming increasingly powerful.

The sluggish global economy has taken a toll on Belize, where 25 percent of the economy is linked to tourism.

The country is also behind on an overdue debt interest payment and narrowly avoided full-blown default in late September after paying a portion of what it owes. It was subsequently granted a two-month reprieve by its creditors.

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