Wednesday 24 April 2024

Costa Rica Arrests Illustrate Rise in Trafficking, Consumption

Paying the bills

Latest

How relocating from the U.S. to Costa Rica’s ‘blue zone’ totally changed this family’s life forever

QCOSTARICA (CTV) When Kema Ward-Hopper and her then-fiance Nicholas...

UAE, Costa Rica Sign Trade Deal

QCOSTARICA -- The United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Costa...

Coffee or Chocolate? Why not both?

QCOSTARICA -San José is a city of surprises. Two...

Plastic bags are not going away (yet)

QCOSTARICA -- Different commercial and productive sectors in Costa...

Media outlets in Nicaragua not reporting news regarding Sheynnis Palacios

QCOSTARICA -- According to the Costa Rica based Fundación...

Can Microdose Mushrooms Boost Productivity? Find Out What Experts Are Saying

Microdosing involves taking a small, controlled amount—usually around 1/8...

“Respect for the division of powers” legislator tells President Chaves

QCOSTARICA - A call for respect for the division...

Dollar Exchange

¢498.48 BUY

¢504.43 SELL

24 April 2024 - At The Banks - Source: BCCR

Paying the bills

Share

Four out of five people detained by Costa Rica’s special police task force during the first nine months of 2013 were arrested for drug-related crimes, a sign of the growth of trafficking and the domestic drug market in the country.

Confiscated drugs by Costa Rica's drug enforcement police, the PCD. Photo: Ministerio de Seguridad Pública
Confiscated drugs by Costa Rica’s drug enforcement police, the PCD. Photo: Ministerio de Seguridad Pública

Of the 4,500 people arrested between January and September this year by the police’s Operation Support Group (GAO) — which intervenes in urban areas with high levels of violent and organized crime — more than 3,500 were detained for drug offences, reported CB24.

According to Costa Rica’s Minister of Security Mario Zamora, those crimes were a combination of drug trafficking, possession and consumption, reported La Nacion. Zamora said the majority of arrests were made in the provinces of San Jose, Limon, Alajuela, Cartago and Heredia, which include seven of the country’s ten largest cities.

- Advertisement -

La Nacion reported that during that time period, the GAO had seized tens of thousands of doses of marijuana, cocaine and cocaine derivatives.

The fact such a massive percentage of people arrested by the GAO were in some way involved in drugs points to the growing use of Costa Rica as a transit point and the growing domestic market that has followed this uptick.

The combination of expansive forested coastlines and a lack of a military make Costa Rica vulnerable to drug traffickers, who have been increasingly pushed south from Mexico by the government and rivals in recent years. Traffickers from elsewhere in the region have also been detained in the country, as have large drug shipments. An internal government report earlier this year highlighted the use of the country as a departure point for drugs headed to 39 countries on four continents.

All of these conditions lend themselves to a growing domestic market, which has increased violence. While Costa Rica remains one of the least violent countries in the region, according to the Organization of American States’ (OAS) 2012 Report on Citizen Security in the Americas, the homicide rate almost doubled between 2000 and 2010, and the rate of cocaine consumption in 2010 — the most recent figures available — was more than double that of Brazil, the world’s second largest domestic cocaine market after the United States.

This link between drug trafficking and domestic consumption has long been identified, and the growing importance of Costa Rica as a drug transit point and concomitant rise in violence and consumption has previously been noted by the country’s President Laura Chinchilla.

Source: Insightcrime.org

- Advertisement -

 

- Advertisement -
Paying the bills
Carter Maddox
Carter Maddoxhttp://carterjonmaddox@gmail.com
Carter is self-described as thirty-three-and-a-half years old and his thirty-three-and-a-half years birthday is always on March 3. Carter characteristically avoids pronouns, referring to himself in the third person (e.g. "Carter has a question" rather than, "I have a question"). One day [in 1984], Carter, raised himself up and from that day forward we could all read what Carter writes.

Related Articles

Cuba Plane Crash: Company ‘Had Safety Complaints’

Solidarity and investigations after the accident. Cuban authorities are investigating the...

The Volcanos Of Central America (By Country)

Among the things most loved by travelers to Central America is...

Subscribe to our stories

To be updated with all the latest news, offers and special announcements.

Discover more from Q COSTA RICA

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading