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Santo Domingo.- The Presidency’s Antinarcotics Adviser on Monday said there’s as many as 300,000 boys and girls who’ve been touched by drug addiction in one way or another, while the country's geographical position in the Caribbean puts in the sights of International drug traffickers.

Marino Vinicio Castillo, speaking one day after the unveiling of the U.S. Predator aircraft to patrol against drug trafficking, also cited the major growth of port facilities, airports, shipping’s boom and the development of industrial free zones.

"The physical geography does us much damage, putting us in a very difficult position, the drug passes through here, but we have a movement of around two million containers, a vast free zone structure, agricultural production, five international airports. They’ve begun to leave drugs, and developed a domestic market which has created between 250,000 to 300,000 boys and girls who in one way or another have been touched by addiction," the official said.

He said the eight Super Tucano aircraft acquired by the Government in 2009 to protect the airspace against drug trafficking reduced to zero the around 400 recorded flights between 2005 and 2008.

The official said however that other weak points still remain. "Now we have to make new and stronger efforts at sea and land borders, which remain very punctured. Then there’s the infiltration of the worst traditional mafia; the Russians, and aggressive Mexican cartels like the Zetas and Sinaloa and also infiltration of the scourge in the armed forces, police, political parties, business, banking, the real estate market, it’s a physical control over territory in very sensitive areas."

He said the Government is working on an agreement and the purchase of sophisticated radar from Israel. “The effort is being made and the U.S., Netherlands and Colombia are participating. The idea is to acquire well equipped, well radarized speedboats, to do at sea the same that was done on land.”

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COMMENTS
10 comment(s)
Written by: josean, 17 Jul 2012 7:48 AM
From: United States, Fighting the Dictatorship of the Narco PLD Mafia; Guillermo Moreno President 2016


Audit the Accounts of the PURPLE MAFIA!


Written by: foresthill, 17 Jul 2012 7:51 AM
From: Dominican Republic
Here come the excuses for Leonel and his corrupt government.
Written by: zooma, 17 Jul 2012 8:11 AM
From: United States


The "more needed" to fight drugs is should be directed first to clean house within the military, paramilitary, police, gov't officials, and politicians on the take.

I would suggest this be done with an independent investigative agency, mercenaries with no prior predjudices, acquired from outside the country who would be given complete authority and facilities to weed out the criminal element within government. They would directly report to a committee made up of the representatives from Senate, Deputies, church, community leaders, and the head fiscal.

Partial funding would come from the proceeds of confiscated properties of the criminal element.

Written by: josean, 17 Jul 2012 8:26 AM
From: United States, Fighting the Dictatorship of the Narco PLD Mafia; Guillermo Moreno President 2016

"Senate, Deputies, church, community leaders, and the head fiscal."

I admire your suggestion, but I am afraid that would be like letting the Foxes supervise the Chicken Coop!





Written by: gmiller261, 17 Jul 2012 11:46 AM
From: United States


"top official says more needed to fight drugs"

Yeah because with the drones they get no kickbacks.
Written by: GoneNative, 17 Jul 2012 12:04 PM
From: Dominican Republic, La Romana
The Netherlands is helping???. Soft drugs are semi-legal in the Netherlands and Rotterdam and Schiphol, (a Dutch airport) are the largest entry ports for hard drugs in Europe. Are we sure the Dutch don't just want to redirect some of the business?
Written by: calvoleon, 17 Jul 2012 4:02 PM
From: Dominican Republic
300,000 on illegal drugs, 3 millions on alcohol!
Written by: hellborn25, 17 Jul 2012 9:13 PM
From: United States, I dont even live inside a house , I haunt one!
Santo Domingo.- The Presidency’s Antinarcotics Adviser on Monday said there’s as many as 300,000 boys and girls who’ve been touched by drug addiction in one way or another, while the country's geographical position in the Caribbean puts in the sights of International drug traffickers.

Heres and idea , banned all entry to the country all the mexicans, colombians , venezuelans, citizens , until the government of each banned country , finds a counter productive method of destroying and eliminating all farming of coca fields , and coca crops .
Written by: hellborn25, 17 Jul 2012 9:14 PM
From: United States, I dont even live inside a house , I haunt one!
of coused the dominican republic will never do this , because the dominican republic does not have balls , so we are stuck with the slime in government for now and forever.
Written by: Carpintero, 18 Jul 2012 12:05 AM
From: Dominican Republic, Dominican Republic
I'm glad somebody in the government has noticed the most dangerous aspect of the country's drug smuggling problem, which is the spread of drug use to the local population, especially the youth.

This is far more dangerous to people in the DR (locals and foreign residents) than smugglers using the country as a transfer point on the way to the US and Europe.

Such smuggling aggravates the country's corruption problem, but it doesn't drive the increase in street crime, robberies and killings or create local gangs fighting over turf in the barrios (and maybe in the tourist areas).

If and when drug use becomes widespread within the country, then we will have have a REAL problem. (Look at what has happened in many urban areas of the US, and even in rural areas where meth labs are a feature of daily life.)

Unfortunately, I'm worried this is where the DR is headed. Between widespread poverty & unemployment and ineffective & corrupt police, the 300,000 could rapidly become 3 million.
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