News

$1 billion slated for Central America’s drug war

Posted: Friday, June 24, 2011 - By AFP
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Costa Rica’s President Laura Chinchilla and other leaders met in Guatemala City to discuss how to better fight crime and narco-trafficking in the region.
Drug War
AFP

Focus on Crime: U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton meets with Guatemalan President Álvaro Colom on Wednesday in Guatemala City during the International Conference of Support for the Central American Security Strategy. Costa Rican President Laura Chinchilla and other Central American heads of state also attended the one-day security summit that aimed to respond to growing violence in the region.

GUATEMALA CITY – The World Bank unveiled Wednesday a billion-dollar bid to support security measures in Central America, as the United States and Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) upped their funding in the region as well.

The new funds come amid an upsurge in drug-related killings in Central America, a region the United Nations says is now the world’s most violent area outside of war zones. Costa Rican President Laura Chinchilla joined other world leaders, including U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, in Guatemala’s capital to discuss how the region can better combat organized crime and drug trafficking.

“The World Bank will provide $1 billion for Central America in the coming years, which can be used by each country for its own priorities, and clearly including a security strategy,” said World Bank vice president for Latin America and the Caribbean, Pamela Cox.

Cox said the bank can offer technical assistance, especially in ways to strengthen national institutions.

“We have picked up a great deal of experience that combines technical knowledge of the region with the bank’s global focus,” she said.

The Inter-American Development Bank also said it would provide some $500 million, spread over two years, to supplement funding efforts from the region and donor countries, IDB President Luis Alberto Moreno said.

Clinton announced that funding for Washington’s regional security partnership effort was being increased to $300 million this year, up from $260 million.

She said the “almost $300 million this year backed up by an action plan of our own focused on high-impact investments” could have a deep impact on the violence-scarred region.

“We will be your ready partners but it must begin with you and led by you. Political power is necessary to root out corruption and ensure accountable and effective institutions,” she added.

Amid Clinton’s announcement, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos proposed the creation of a regional center to fight money laundering.

“We should hit them where it hurts. And in the drug business what hurts most is their money, their property,” he said.

He also proposed creating a regional database that would contain information about all weapons seized in each country and could help determine where the weapons came from and how they entered the region.

Santos suggested possibly training central security forces at facilities in Colombia, highlighting that his country has experience dealing with criminal organizations.

“This is a dangerous enemy, no scruples, no respect for human rights, but we must respect human rights, so you must train the security forces to be effective without destroying the democratic values,” he said.

Drug War 2

Crime Fighters: Costa Rica’s President Laura Chinchilla met with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Latin American heads of state in Guatemala City to discuss how to fight crime and drug trafficking.

AFP

Both were attending the Central American Security Conference with the leaders of Guatemala, Belize, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica and Panama, aiming to curb crime in one of the world’s most violent regions, fueled by a spillover from Mexico’s war on drug cartels.

“Everyone knows the statistics, the murder rates surpassing civil wars levels, the citizens who rank security as their top concern, the violence that burdens economic development and foreign direct investment,” Clinton said in remarks to the conference.

She also highlighted “the threats to democracy, and the impacts on society’s most vulnerable populations, especially women and children.”

“But we don’t need to go through the statistics, because many of you around this table are living these brutal facts every single day.”

Saying she wanted “to make good on the promise of shared responsibility,” Clinton stressed the funds will help pay for special police units, intelligence gathering, training of judges and prosecutors, and other efforts.

Washington would back the region in the fight against organized crime “because we care about the citizens ... but also because we know that the wave of violence sweeping Central America also threatens our own country.”

“And therefore, we see this not just as an obligation, but as a mutual responsibility,” Clinton said.

During her visit, Clinton also met with Guatemalan President Álvaro Colom and Honduran President Porfirio Lobo.

The top U.S. diplomat left later in the day for Jamaica, where she planned talks on security efforts in the Caribbean region.

According to the IDB, Washington has allocated a total of some $377 million for security efforts in the region.

In remarks at the conference, Costa Rica’s Chinchilla highlighted the plight of women who have become involved in the region’s growing drug trade. “Recently we’ve see a feminization of the [drug-trade] problem. The main crime that puts women in jail is local drug dealing. Up to 70 percent of the women in jail in Costa Rica are there on drug-related charges,” Chinchilla said.

The Costa Rican president also took a jab at her Nicaraguan counterpart, Daniel Ortega, by mentioning a recent border conflict between the two countries.

“Our objective should be to fight crime, but always according to international law. We are not willing to permit flagrant violations of territorial sovereignty by a state, as recently happened to us,” Chinchilla said.

  • Currently 0 out of 5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Rating: 0/5 (0 votes cast)

Thank you for rating!

You have already rated this page, you can only rate it once!

Your rating has been changed, thanks for rating!

Log in or create a user account to rate this page.

| Share

To comment, write a letter to the editor to letters@ticotimes.net. Please make sure to include your full name and location. Letters must be 500 words or fewer. Submissions should be original.

Log in or create a user account to comment.

Comments

A billion dollars! Sounds impressive doesn't it? Too bad that is a fraction of what the United States consumes in a single day. Somehow I get the feeling that in the not to distant future the United Nations will be taking orders from guys on an Amazon mountaintop.
I've been watching CR for some 15 years and planned to retire and buy a few hundred acres and develop a nice farm and community--to create a dozen or so jobs --to create a small export company--to provide for the children of my employees a chance to go to college. But over the last couple of years--peoples rights and democracy have forced me to rethink my options. The CR government is patterning itself after the US which is in terrible shpe now and heading for a great disaster. If it were not for the military strength in America, it would be a second world country in five years. The ghetto belt as it is known, from Detroit to New York, is already second world. Costa Ricans are smart people and need to take whatever measures needed to make their country proud and prosperous, not to ask for handouts and smile at the cameras. Beware--your children make not be asked to learn English in school, but rather demanded to learn Chinese so they can obey their bosses.
But wait a minute guys. This time its going to work because there are one billion bucks at stake! Oh yeah that will make the difference, just like $100.00 dollar a gallon for gas in Afghanistan. And don't forget, it really, really is serious because President Chinchilla has her hand underneath her chin. Which means she is really serious! With all apologies to President Chinchilla, but esto parece puro vapor! Translation for the expats: Hot Air! Pura Vida!!!
This is just more of throwing good money after bad phenomenon the US has become so good at in recent years, especially in the foreign policy arena
1 billion! That seems to be pocket change for the drug cartel and Mexican Mafia with estimated 200 billion profit. Most of it will go into pockets of the various government officials including Lady Laura . Will not make a dent in the crime in Central America. Like John Dungan says LEGALIZE!!! Just like probation never worked. What a crime, scam and a shame!
I got a better idea. Save the freakin' money (One Billion Dollars?!), and just legalize drugs. Sign the Vienna Declaration, and let the drug users pay for regulation.

Weekend

Restaurants

100 percent good 1

After striving to formulate delicious gluten-free recipes and a special flour to prepare dishes f...

Arts & Leisure

Strike Up the Symphony

The 2012 lineup includes free Summer Concerts around the Central Valley, the official season of 1...

Travel

Riding the Wave 2

Local Costa Rican surfers who once worked for North American surf-school owners are setting up sh...

Fishing Fishing Forum

Sailfish on water

A 40-mile area around Carrillo on the northern Pacific coast will be closed to commercial longlin...