Israele diventa importante polo del commercio internazionale di cocaina
Sintesi personale
Sulla parete della Polizia Israeliana è attaccata una mappa del mondo.
I paesi del Centro e Sud America sono evidenziati in rosso, i paesi
dell'Africa occidentale sono evidenziati in verde e le frecce indicano i movimenti del traffico di droga diretta in Israele.
Va notato che Israele ha un "ruolo di stella" nel World Drug Report del 2013 rilasciato dall'Ufficio delle Nazioni Unite contro la Droga e
il Crimine e pubblicato lo scorso giugno.
Nella relazione annuale per il 2012 l'International Narcotics
Control Board elenca Brasile e Israele tra i " i
principali produttori, esportatori, importatori e utilizzatori di
sostanze stupefacenti.".
Negli ultimi anni c'è stato un significativo aumento del numero di
persone ricoverate in Israele per il
consumo di cocaina.Tuttavia, la situazione in Israele non è sostanzialmente diversa da
quella europea o americana , la cocaina come moda è semplicemente
arrivata in Israele in ritardo. .
Già nei primi decenni del secolo scorso la cocaina aveva fatto la sua comparsa a Tel Aviv. Nel 1929, la polizia di Tel Aviv aveva sequestrato 800 grammi di droga, che all'epoca valeva £ 300 palestinesi., nascosta in un libro arrivato da Vienna.
"Attualmente ci sono organizzazioni criminali israeliani che hanno unito le forze
con i principali cartelli della droga del mondo", dichiara un funzionariodella
rete di intelligence della polizia israeliana.
"I criminali israeliani hanno una buona reputazione in tutto
il mondo perché hanno connessioni globali. e sanno come trovare investitori per
finanziare la spedizione di droga ".
Nel 2008, un importante anello di contrabbando internazionale è stato scoperto da agenti delle forze dell'ordine israeliano. Oltre 1,5 tonnellate di cocaina erano stati spediti in contenitori verso Israele e altre destinazioni.
Yoram Elal che aveva stretti legami con la famiglia criminale
Abergil , è stato arrestato in Brasile nel 2011.
"Oggi" -osserva il funzionario di alto rango- "lavoriamo con le forze di polizia di tutto
il mondo su casi che coinvolgono non solo Israele, ma anche altri
paesi. ".
Articolo in lingua inglese
Israel becomes major hub in the international cocaine trade, abuse rising
Israele :la mafia israeliana preoccupa gli Usa
Zeiler ;in Israele la mafia è sempre più forte
Number of cocaine users in Israel has doubled in recent years and the Israel Police reports that Israeli criminals have joined hands with the cartels.
On a wall of a Israel Police
classified intelligence unit hangs a map of the world. The countries of
Central and South America are highlighted in red, the countries of
western Africa are highlighted in green and arrows drawn the length and
width of the map indicating drug trafficking movements all point to one
country, whose name is highlighted: Israel.
It
should be noted that Israel has a “star role” in the World Drug Report
for 2013 issued by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime and
released last June. In the report, which discusses trends in the world,
Israel is not infrequently listed in connection with cocaine. Over
recent years, there has been a significant increase in cocaine
trafficking to and from Israel: “Limited but non-negligible amounts of
cocaine have also been seized in the Syrian Arab Republic, Lebanon and,
notably, Israel, which registered an increase in 2011; hence a link
between this emerging route and the Near and Middle East cannot be
excluded.”
In
its annual report for 2012, the International Narcotics Control Board
lists Brazil and Israel among the “countries that are major
manufacturers, exporters, importers and users of narcotic drugs.”
Whereas
Israel is mentioned in the same breath with Brazil with regard to the
cocaine trade, it is difficult to find up-to-date figures in Israel on
the scope of cocaine trafficking at the local level. However, the latest
survey by Israel’s Anti-Drug Authority on cocaine, which appeared in
2009, noted a clear trend: In comparison with 2005, the amount of
cocaine used in Israel had doubled by 2009 and close to one percent of
all Israelis aged 18-40 indicated they had used cocaine by then.
Dr.
Haim Mal, head of the rehabilitation unit in the Israel Anti-Drug
Authority, believes that the increased use of cocaine in Israel stems
from changes in the lifestyle of Israelis. “Whereas people in the past
looked for drugs that would soothe them and produce peace of mind, now
they are looking for drugs that will enable them to be more alert.
Cocaine is a social drug that can be found in nightclubs in Israel’s
major cities and among a wide range of users, most of them in the
liberal professions,” Mal said. He points out that cocaine is “a social
phenomenon that has emerged in Israel as in other countries around the
world.”
In
recent years, there has been a significant increase in the number of
persons who have been hospitalized in Israel as a result of cocaine use.
“Unlike heroin, which damages the body physically,” he emphasizes,
“cocaine damages the soul.”
“It
was three in the morning and I had already had a number of drinks,” G.,
a young Israeli woman in her 30s with a Master’s degree in Law,
describes an evening she spent in a local nightclub a year and a half
ago. “The washrooms were really crowded, but not always because of
bursting bladders. There was a disorderly lineup that was moving along
very slowly. Sometimes the door opened and out would come two to four
people, who had emerged from one of the stalls. After about a quarter of
an hour, or it might have been 20 minutes, it was my turn."
"I
went in with two friends; one of them took out a bag of coke and began
to spread the stuff on a small surface. He then used a credit card to
arrange the coke in rows. I took out a 100-shekel note from my pocket,
rolled it up and then each of us took turns snorting two rows. At that
moment, I still felt nothing. I went to the bar and ordered a vodka
chaser; we all then went back to the dance floor. We danced up a storm
and felt we could go on doing that forever. Suddenly, you have this
burst of energy. Everything was dark around me and I couldn’t give a
damn about anyone; I was so full of self-confidence," G. recounted her
experience.
"After
less than an hour, we went back to the washrooms. It was like some kind
of ceremony and that’s how the entire evening progressed right up until
dawn. I emerged from the nightclub. It was six in the morning and I
couldn’t believe that it was daylight outside. Nor could I believe that I
had danced without getting tired. Since then, I never go to a nightclub
without my sunglasses,” she concluded.
According
to figures released by the UN, the chief increase in cocaine
trafficking and consumption is taking place in the developing countries
of Asia, with Israel being one of these. However, the situation in
Israel is not substantially different from that in Europe or the U.S.;
cocaine has simply arrived in Israel fashionably late. What is more, the
percentage of cocaine seized by the authorities – estimated to be about
three to seven percent of the total amount being trafficked into Israel
– is similar to the figures in other countries. In Israel in 2009, 63
kilograms were seized; for 2010, 2011, and 2012, the corresponding
figures are 71, 264 and 171.
The
Israel Police are painfully aware of the fact that these amounts are a
drop in the bucket and that they have no impact whatsoever on the drug’s
availability. Nor has the construction of the fence along Israel’s
border with Sinai led to any “evaporation” of the hashish trafficked in
this country and it has had no effect on the accessibility of cocaine,
which can be obtained almost every evening in local nightclubs. This is a
drug that brings in huge profits to those who sell it; thus, they
always find ways to meet the demand of the market.
In
Israel, as in other countries, cocaine is perceived as the drug of the
rich, and not just because of its high price. Drug dealers call it “the
drug that lifts you up, because it takes you to the best places
imaginable but leaves you sharp and focused – king or queen of the
world.” Crack cocaine is not prevalent in Israel.
As
early as the first decades of the previous century, cocaine made its
appearance in Tel Aviv. In 1929, the Tel Aviv Police seized 800 grams of
the drug, which at the time was worth 300 Palestinian pounds. The
cocaine had been concealed in a book that had arrived from Vienna. In
1936, a Jaffa resident was arrested with cocaine in his possession. The
British magistrate’s court judge sentenced him to three months behind
bars.
Cocaine
is extracted from the coca plant, which grows primarily in South
America. Last year, Peru became the world’s number one exporter of
cocaine with a total of no less than 538 tons of the drug shipped out of
the country, according to estimates made by international law
enforcement agencies. Second in this notorious list is Colombia, with
345 tons exported in 2012, followed by Bolivia with 265 tons exported
during that same year.
Because
of the never-ending international war on drugs, which is being
spearheaded by America’s Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), drug
dealers use various sophisticated methods for reaching their customers.
In recent years, a new drug trafficking route has opened up from West
Africa – chiefly through the territories of weak countries with unstable
regimes. Because of the prevalence there of weak governments in power
and corrupt law enforcement systems, the West African countries have
become virgin soil for the importation and redistribution of cocaine
from South America. Recently, an additional smuggling route has been
launched through Syria and Lebanon; it then continues through Turkey to
all of Europe.
On
the consumption end, the U.S. takes a leading role. In one University
of Massachusetts study, 90 percent of all U.S. bank notes were examined
had traces of cocaine. However, America is not alone as far as use of
cocaine is concerned; it is simply at the top of a list that includes
several European countries, such as Spain, Portugal, the Netherlands,
Belgium, the United Kingdom and Italy. The United Nations Office on
Drugs and Crime estimates that the main Mafia organizations in Italy –
Ndrangheta, or the Calabrian Mafia, Cosa Nostra, and Camorra, or the
Neapolitan Mafia – rake in an annual income of 116 billion euros. That
is more than the annual sales volume of Italy’s energy giant, Eni, the
country’s largest company.
When
“black money” on such a monstrous scale is being circulated around the
world, it invariably attracts the major crime organizations, including
those in Israel. “There are Israeli crime organizations that have joined
forces with the world’s major drug cartels,” says a member of the
intelligence network of the Israel Police. “Criminals are measured by
their ability to traffic huge quantities of drugs and today there are
several Israeli criminals who can traffic impressive quantities around
the world. Israeli drug criminals have a good reputation in the world
because they meet several of the criteria in the field and because
Israelis have global connections.”
The
fact that a number of Israeli criminals have immigrated to other
countries can be a boon to their drug business. “Israeli criminals never
touch the drugs they traffic,” the police official continues, “they
merely serve as middlemen. They open a ‘cashbox,’ namely, a shipping
container holding several hundred kilograms of cocaine and they know how
to find investors to fund the shipment.”
Recent
police reports include references to such a “cashbox” that was opened
and was on its way to Australia; a number of Israeli criminals were
involved in this deal. Not very long ago, members of an international
cocaine trafficking network were arrested by the
Israel Police’s
International and Serious Crimes Unit. Some of the members of the ring
were Israeli expatriates who were formerly identified with the criminal
organization headed by Israeli crime boss Yitzhak Abergil.
In
2008, a major international smuggling ring was put out of business by
Israeli law enforcement agents. Over 1.5 tons of cocaine were shipped in
containers to Israel and other destinations. Moshe Elgrably, an escaped
Israeli criminal and a number of the members of the ring were
apprehended in Peru, Spain and Israel. The estimated value of the
contraband in the container was NIS 2 billion (over half a billion
dollars). Yoram Elal, someone who had close connections with the Abergil
crime family and who, according to police estimates, was a major
Israeli drug dealer, primarily trafficking in ecstasy but also in
cocaine, was arrested in Brazil in 2011 after being placed on the wanted
list by the international police organization, Interpol.
However,
even when the police can place their hands on drug shipments, they do
not always know the identity of the people behind the shipments. For
instance, two years ago, in the spring of 2011, on the eve of the
Passover, a container arrived at the port of Ashdod with 250 kg. of
cocaine; the police are still waiting to see who will come to claim the
container. Or, for instance, the destination of two shipments of 130 kg.
and 139 kg. respectively of cocaine that were seized in containers
holding coffee beans and which were sent from Colombia in 2008 and 2010
remains a mystery to this very day.
In
Israel, a special unit has been set up in the national headquarters of
the Israel Police whose mandate is the maintaining of ongoing
intelligence and operational contacts with other police forces around
the world for the purpose of more effectively waging the war on drugs.
It has long been thought that local police forces are the most fruitful
source of intelligence pertinent to this war.
In
many cases, the absence of a budget for the global war on drugs has
forced drug enforcement agencies to become highly creative. For example,
there is no funding available for monitoring communications with
distant courtiers over a period of several months. “Today,” observes the
high-ranking official in the intelligence network of the Israel Police,
“we work with police forces all over the world on cases that involve
not only Israel but also other countries. The information flows
constantly between the police forces of different countries. Not only
does the Israel Police have nothing to be ashamed of in connection with
the war on cocaine trafficking; it has a lot to be proud of.”
Over
the years, cocaine continues to be the most lucrative of all illicit
drugs. A kilogram of cocaine costs between $3,000 and $5,000 in South
America. Nonetheless, people who are strangers to local drug dealers in
South America will find it very hard to purchase “only” one kilogram. In
many cases, South American drug dealers will prefer to hand over
small-time buyers of this variety to the police in return for the
latter’s turning a blind eye to major drug deals. Additionally, people
interested in buying drugs sometimes find that, after they have paid for
the drug, the drug dealer just disappears with their money. In this
way, drug dealers maintain an exclusive relationship with crime
organizations.
But how are things managed when local drug dealers
agree to sell a small quantity of coke to a buyer? One method is to hide
the material in a variety of hiding places, some of which are highly
unusual – ranging from briefcases and books to memorial candles and even
gravestones. The drug can be concealed in solid or liquid form. Another
method, which is just as common, is to employ couriers who can conceal
the drug inside their body.
Recently,
the Tel Aviv Central Unit of the Israel Police arrested a number of
drug couriers. One of them was a 60-year-old Colombian who was hired by a
drug dealer in his native country to serve as a drug courier to Israel
for $8,000. When the courier arrived at the Olympia Hotel on Hayarkon
Street in Tel Aviv, Yaakov Tzaadi, 34, of Rishon Letzion, was waiting to
receive the shipment. However, as the two were making the exchange,
detectives attached to the drug squad of the Tel Aviv Central Unit burst
into their hotel room, promptly arresting the two.
“On
flights from Spain, which are also connecting flights from South
America,” points out A., a senior official with the drugs and money
laundering enforcement unit in the customs division of the Israel Tax
Authority, “you will almost always find cocaine in the possession of one
of the passengers.” This statement holds true for all of Europe, and
Israel, he notes, “is no exception.”
Superintendent
Naom Deshati, commander of the 747 unit of the Israel Police branch at
David Ben-Gurion International Airport, says that some 13 million
passengers pass through the airport annually. “You can bet your bottom
dollar,” he observes, “that we do not have the capacity for checking
each and every one of them. Although we do not know whether there has
been any increase in cocaine use, we do know that there has been an
increase in the number of drug shipment seizures.”
The
Colombian courier arrested in a Tel Aviv hotel perfectly fits the
profile of the classic courier who carries the drug within his or her
body: a South American of little means who is exploited by local
gangsters.
For
anywhere between $1,000 and $8,000, these couriers agree to transfer
the cocaine to a target country. In most cases, the drug dealers fill
condoms with cocaine and the courier inserts the filled condom into his
or her body through one of his orifices – mouth, anus or vagina. The
largest quantity of cocaine ever discovered inside a courier’s body was
2.5 kg. Last year, a commercial airliner traveling the route between
Peru and Israel landed the Ben-Gurion Airport with a dead passenger.
Only after the corpse had been taken to hospital and an autopsy
performed, was it discovered that a condom filled with 12 gm. of cocaine
had burst in his abdomen.
Only
last week, two suspected couriers who were arrested immediately upon
their arrival in Israel were brought before the district court in Lod.
District Court Judge Yaakov Spesser took pains to point out that the
accused persons were “at the very bottom of the hierarchical pyramid of
drug trafficking.” He said that couriers in this category are “pitiful
human beings, who are usually illiterate, nearly penniless and unaware
of the nature of the crime in which they have become involved. They are
exploited by people who tempt them with a cash reward. Sometimes their
exploiters deceive them and do not even pay them when the job is done.”
In
January 1978, Major General Moshe Tiomkin, then commander of the Israel
Police’s Tel Aviv District, summoned the editors of all the media in
Israel in order to show them the nature of the uncompromising war being
waged against drugs. He showed the editors the specially trained dogs
recruited for this purpose and declared proudly that police in Tel Aviv
seized in the previous year 130 gm. of cocaine. Many years later, in
that same district, the commander of the Tel Aviv Central District of
the Israel Police announced this week the seizure of 17 kg. of that very
same drug.
- Ottieni link
- X
- Altre app
Commenti
Posta un commento