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Terrorists Get Cash From Drug Trade

Dan Gardner

Ottawa Citizen (Canada)

Friday 14 Sep 2001

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Trafficking Prime Source Of Funds For Many Groups

In response to this week's terrorist attacks in the
United States, U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell
told a news conference Wednesday that "we have to make
sure that we go after terrorism and get it by its
branch and root."

Mr. Powell meant his comment to be a warning to
states that support terrorists. But the evil of
terrorism has another root: money. Terrorist groups
may be forged by people holding fanatical beliefs,
but their operations still need material support.
Weapons have to be bought, training financed, travel
paid for, bribes offered and terrorists sheltered.
Even zealots need cash.

"It used to be that the terrorism was funded by
nation states, particularly the old Soviet Union,"
said John Thompson of the Mackenzie Institute, a
Canadian think tank studying terrorism and organized
crime. "But as the Soviet Union weakened in the 1980s,
more and more insurgent groups, terrorist groups,
started to resort to organized criminal activities
to pay their bills."

There are still a few state sponsors left, Mr.
Thompson notes, although today they try to hide
that support. These include North Korea, Iraq and
Syria. And in some countries, such as Pakistan and
India, officials "within a state, without the
state's knowledge, use their offices to fund
terrorism."

A very few wealthy individuals fund terrorism with
their personal fortunes. Osama bin Laden, a prime
suspect in Tuesday's attacks, is one such benefactor.
His wealth comes from the construction industry and,
although his assets were frozen a couple of years
ago, Mr. Thompson believes he was able to spirit
out "several tens of millions" of dollars.

Another common source of cash for terrorists is
money raised among expatriates. The Tamil Tigers
of Sri Lanka are thought to derive much of their
funding from donations by Tamils living elsewhere,
including Canada. Sometimes those donations are
voluntary, but often terrorist groups will raise
funds through fake charities, or extort them by
threat.

But these sources of funding are not the bread
and butter of terrorism, Mr. Thompson said. "The
big money earner for most of them seems to be
narcotics."

Law enforcement agencies agree. In 1994,
Interpol's chief drugs officer, Iqbal Hussain
Rizvi, admitted that "drugs have taken over as
the chief means of financing terrorism."

After the fall of the Soviet Union, terrorists
quickly moved into the business that offers
bigger, faster profits than any other. In Northern
Ireland, both Loyalist and Republican paramilitaries
traffic drugs to pay for weapons.

In Kosovo, "the creation of the KLA (Kosovo
Liberation Army) was financed by intense heroin
trafficking from Istanbul," Alain Labrousse, the
head of Observatoire francais des drogues et des
toxicomanies, a French organization that studies
drugs, recently testified before a Canadian Senate
committee. "The heroin was sold in Switzerland to
buy Kalashnikovs and handguns."

In Peru and Colombia, leftist rebels have tapped
into the illicit trade in cocaine and heroin to
finance their activities. The leader of right-wing
paramilitaries in Colombia recently admitted that
they get 70 per cent of their funding from the
illegal drug trade.

In his presentation to the Senate committee, Mr.
Labrousse presented a list of countries in which
armed insurgents have been financed to some degree
by the black market in drugs. There were 29 nations
in all.

Just how much of a group's financing comes from
drugs varies widely, Mr. Thompson said. "With the
Islamic fundamentalists, (it is) maybe 25 to 30 per
cent. It's probably the single biggest money earner."

The drugs trafficked by Islamic terrorists include
marijuana from Lebanon, but more commonly they
distribute heroin. Afghanistan is one of the largest
growers of opium poppies, the source of heroin.

Even Osama bin Laden may have his hands in the drug
trade. According to a Russian report, Mr. bin Laden
has bankrolled Chechen gunmen in Dagestan with funds
generated from heroin trafficking.

The importance of illegal drugs to the financing of
terrorism raises an obvious question. If illegal
drugs are the single largest source of funding for
terrorism, can you hurt terrorism by legalizing
drugs?

"Probably," John Thompson said. "In fact I think you
could hurt it considerably."

Drug policy activists have long argued that by
banning drugs and putting them into the black market,
Western nations have fuelled mayhem.

"We have to look at the ways that our drug policies
are enriching terrorist organizations just the way
that they're enriching organized crime," said Eugene
Oscapella, an Ottawa lawyer and a founding member
of the Canadian Foundation for Drug Policy.

So far, that reconsideration hasn't happened. The G8
and the United Nations have discussed the problem of
terrorist financing over the past several years, but
they have never discussed drug prohibition in that
light. The G8 went so far as to explicitly refuse to
talk about drug legalization.

Instead, they have focused on fundraising among
expatriate communities and other, lesser sources of
financing.

Yesterday, British Prime Minister Tony Blair insisted
that in striking back at terrorism, the West would have
to cut off the money that pays for terrorist atrocities.

There's little question that the drive against terrorism
will be sweeping, taking in all the "roots and branches,"
including financing. But Mr. Thompson doesn't expect world
governments to seriously consider whether they might cut
off much of the money flowing into terrorist hands by
abolishing drug prohibition.

"This is a sacred cow. It's going to be hard to kill."


 

 

 

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