First Published 2009-11-25


Smuggled to ports in Morocco, Libya and Egypt

 
Drugs - not extremism - that threatens stability in North Africa

 
Experts say US officials tend to give Al-Qaeda in Maghreb 'more credit than it deserves'.

 
WASHINGTON - The illegal drug trade from Latin America to Europe has the potential of destabilizing regions of North Africa more than extremists, experts say.

Over the past five years Latin American drug cartels have increasingly been shipping cocaine to Europe via west Africa, David Gutelius told the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on African Affairs.

The cocaine is smuggled across the Sahara desert to ports in Morocco, Libya and Egypt and eventually into Europe, said Gutelius, a former university professor who co-owns the Ishitrak consulting firm and has lived in the region.

"Demand from Europe and the relative efficiency of South American cartels in moving drugs to and through West Africa ports has led to an exponential growth in the value and volume of the trade," said Gutelius.

The drug trade "is the largest current threat to regional stability," even more dangerous than the Al-Qaeda in the Land of the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), Gutelius said, adding that US officials "tend to give the group more credit than it deserves."

West Africa "has emerged as a major trans-shipment area for cocaine flowing from South America to Europe," said John Carson, the assistant secretary of state for African affairs, testifying at the same hearing.

Smuggling routes have existed for centuries across the Sahara, but until recently cigarettes, fuel and people were the top items being moved, Gutelius said.

The profits from those items, however, "simply cannot compare to cocaine. This is relatively new," he said.
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