Drug trafficking, violence threaten gains in West
Africa-UN
Masahudu Ankiilu Kunateh, Ghanadot
West Africa’s progress in consolidating stability and
security is being jeopardized by coups and organized crime,
the top United Nations envoy to the region, has warned .
Said Djinnit, the Secretary-General’s Special
Representative, told the Security Council that West Africa’s
determination to “decisively” tackle its problems “have led
to an important reduction in the scope and the level of
violence across the sub-region.”
He pointed out that “there is currently no open armed
conflict going on in West Africa.”
But he cautioned that the progress is fragile, as
exemplified by last year’s coup d’état in Mauritania, the
continued political and constitutional crisis in Niger and
other obstacles – from terrorism to governance to the
current global economic crisis.
Mr. Djinnit, briefing the Council on the Secretary-General’s
most recent report on the UN Office for West Africa (UNOWA),
said the resurgence of unconstitutional or violent changes
in government are “one of the most alarming threats to peace
and stability in West Africa,” he said, adding that all
recent unconstitutional government changes on the continent
– with the exception of Madagascar – have occurred in West
Africa.
He also cited drug trafficking as a key security challenge
to the area, which has become a hub for cocaine trafficking
between Latin America and Europe, with traffickers “taking
advantage of the weaknesses of West African States,
including porous borders, abundant unemployed youth,
widespread corruption and poverty.”
Also addressing today’s open Council meeting, Antonio Maria
Costa, Executive Director of the UN Office on Drugs and
Crime (UNODC), said that the volume of drugs passing through
the region have dropped.
Some 20 tons of cocaine – worth $1 billion – are still
transiting through West Africa annually, and he warned that
there is no guarantee the volumes will continue to fall.
“Perhaps drug flows have only been temporarily disrupted as
criminal groups lie low to minimize risk,” he said.
Recent turmoil in Guinea-Bissau and Guinea has demonstrated
that “there are powerful forces with a stake in illicit
activity,” Mr. Costa told the 15-member body.
“Change, in the direction of more justice and transparency,
is a threat to people with a vested interest in crime,” he
said, calling for the reasons for the region’s vulnerability
to be tackled to make it less attractive to traffickers.
But the UNODC chief emphasized that drugs are not the only
goods being trafficked, with a new agency report showing
that West Africa is also a hub for cigarettes, arms,
counterfeit medicines and oil, among others.
“All this is in the hands of organized crime which is
undermining the rule of law, governance, the environment,
human rights and health,” he said, adding that trafficking
threatens strides made towards achieving the Millennium
Development Goals [MDGs],” eight anti-poverty targets with a
2015 deadline.
The UNODC report found that in some cases, the value of
trafficked goods exceeds the gross domestic product (GDP) of
West African nations, which are among the world’s poorest.
The revenue from 45 million counterfeit anti-malarial pills,
worth nearly $450 million, is greater than Guinea-Bissau’s
GDP, while profits generated by cigarette smuggling, with a
$775 million price tag, surpasses the Gambia’s entire GDP.
Meanwhile, the income derived from illegally selling oil or
trafficking cocaine, worth $1 billion annually each, rivals
the GDPs of Cape Verde and Sierra Leone, the report said.
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