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'Better to be belligerent than innovative': Argentina's new approach to fighting drugs is stoking concern

Christopher Woody   

'Better to be belligerent than innovative': Argentina's new approach to fighting drugs is stoking concern
Defense8 min read

Mauricio Macri arrives for a ceremony in Buenos Aires, October 28, 2015.  REUTERS/Marcos Brindicci

Thomson Reuters

Macri, Buenos Aires' City Mayor and presidential candidate, arrives for a ceremony in Buenos Aires

In late January this year, at little more than a month after he took office, Argentine President Mauricio Marci issued a presidential decree declaring a "state of emergency" in South America's second-largest country.

One of the things asserted in the decree was that trafficking of illegal drugs posed a "threat to national sovereignty."

In the months since, Argentina has pursued muscular law-enforcement practices in its anti-narcotics efforts.

And while the country has not seen the high-levels of drug-related violence witnessed elsewhere in the region, this new trend in the drug fight, and recent violence that appears tied to it, have sparked worry at home.

Macri's campaign framed drug trafficking as a central challenge, and his drug-policy adviser called for a "comprehensive re-engineering" of national security.

As part of the decree issued in January, Macri also authorized the shoot-down of suspected drug planes, a policy recently reinstated by countries in the region that has worried human-rights advocates.

Both drug trafficking and consumption are issues in Argentina.

Argentina Rosario drug trafficking smuggling violence gangs organized crime

REUTERS/Enrique Marcarian

An official from the AFIP tax agency walks her sniffer dog by the port of Rosario, September 10, 2015. International drug-enforcement officials call Rosario "The Tijuana of Argentina" for the violence and criminal activity it has in common with the Mexican border city used to move cocaine into the US.

An August report indicated that there were at least 1,500 clandestine airstrips in the country, providing entry points for shipments of marijuana, cocaine, and coca base, produced in other parts of Latin America. Drugs also enter by land and water - Bolivian cocaine by road and Paraguayan marijuana by river.

The Macri government has gone after precursor chemicals, used in the production of cocaine and synthetic drugs and for which Argentina has become known as a hub. In the first seven months of this year, Argentine authorities seized 700 tons, exceeding the previous annual national average by about seven times.

Drug-related violence has also grown prevalent in some parts of the country.

In the city of Rosario, in northern Santa Fe province, the homicide rate is nearly three times the national average due in part to the growth of gangs involved in the drug trade there. The trade is fed by the province's 32 ports, which are used heavily by traffickers and has challenged local and federal authorities.

Elsewhere in the country, drug traffickers have set up what are basically fiefdoms in sections of major cities, funneling drugs into local drug labs and then shunting the finished product to consumers abroad and at home.

Macri's predecessor, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, has been criticized for her government's lack of action on the country's drug issues, and her administration left few tools to combat them. But Macri's conservative government has been seen as willing to treat anti-narcotics efforts as a security matter, rather than as a social or political one.

Argentina Buenos Aires cocaine drug seizure trafficking smuggling

REUTERS/Marcos Brindicci

Officers from the National Gendarmerie inspect packages of cocaine to be burnt at their headquarters in Buenos Aires, March 10, 2014.

"Argentine politicians, not just this government, like to take a combative stance against narcotrafficking, as they think it produces good electoral results," Alejandro Corda, a lawyer specializing in drug policy, told the FT, referring to midterm elections in 2017.

"It sells much better to be belligerent than innovative," Corda said.

Amid the Macri government's crackdown, insecurity has moved past issues like inflation and unemployment to become the top concern among Argentines.

'It is ironic and tragic'

Argentina - which has explored defense deals with the US, Israel, Spain, and Brazil, rolled out joint police-military operations in border areas, and deployed federal police to crime-ridden areas like Rosario - is not the only country that has expanded the role of the military in domestic security issues.

31 obregn mexico had 3771 homicides per 100000 residents

Reuters

Mexican federal policemen arrest men on suspicion of possessing drugs during an anti-narcotics operation in the Alvaro Obregon district in Mexico City, May 3, 2007.

Mexico has deployed the military and federal police to combat organized crime and drug cartels since the late 2000s.

Venezuela, too, has deployed its national guard on anti-crime operations in major cities.

The consequence has been increased extrajudicial killings and human-rights complaints in both countries, without permanently reducing crime levels.

"Direct intervention by the armed forces in actions against drug trafficking or other forms of crime has grave consequences in terms of increased violence, massive human rights violations, and the de-professionalization and corruption of military structures," Manuel Tufró and Paula Litvachky of the Center for Legal and Social Studies, an Argentine human-rights group, wrote early in Macri's term, referencing the examples of Mexico and Colombia.

"At the same time, progress toward the dismantling of markets and criminal organizations has been little to none," they added.

A particular concern is that a focus on the drug trade as a security issue is a poor way to address problems like addiction and does little to fight problems like corruption.

Argentina Rosario federal police gendarmerie corruption crime violence

REUTERS/Enrique Marcarian

Members of Argentina's Gendarmerie, which took control of security in parts of Rosario city in 2014 after a spike in violence in drug-infested neighborhoods, stand guard next to a person near the Villa Banana slum in Rosario, September 10, 2015.

In Argentina, as in Mexico and elsewhere, there are allegations that the vibrancy of the drug trade is partly the result of official complicity. "There is no drug trafficker that can operate without the endorsement of the police anywhere in Argentina," Marcelo Sain, former vice minister for security in Buenos Aires province, told the FT.

In the city of Rosario, the local police force is thought to be close to local gangs, and about 200 members of the police force are under federal investigation, according to The Economist. In October, the provincial chief of police was sentenced to six years in jail for ties to drug trafficking.

An intensified drug war with an emphasis on punitive measures can also overburden criminal-justice systems. Harsh anti-drug measures rolled out in the mid-2000s have boosted Argentina's prison population exponentially - with many of those prisoners only minor offenders - while having minimal impact on organized crime.

An El País report in October found that prisons in Buenos Aires province, Argentina's largest, had 33,000 prisoners in a space built for 26,000.

MS 13 street gang

REUTERS/Ulises Rodriguez

People arrested for being members of the MS-13 Mara Salvatrucha street gang, among other crimes, flash their gang's hand sign from inside a jail cell at a police station in San Salvador, El Salvador, October 12, 2012.

In Sante Fe province, home to the city of Rosario, 20% of the province's 5,000 prisoners are held in police stations, as the prisons are too full to house them.

Overcrowded prisons have become breeding grounds for further instability.

In places like Mexico and El Salvador, prisons have become redoubts for gangs and cartel bosses. In Venezuela, prisons sometimes appear to be more like weapons depots than correctional facilities.

In Argentina, as in other countries in the region, harsh anti-crime and anti-drug measures maintain public support, as they fit with the popular conviction that force is the best response to insecurity and with politicians' desire to be seen as doing something.

"It is ironic and tragic that Argentina has not learnt from this regional and international debate, and is now reverting back to [militarised] policies that have failed," Coletta Youngers, a senior fellow at the Washington Office on Latin America in Washington, DC, told the Financial Times.

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