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TRAFFICKERS RISK DEATH ON ALBANIAS
HIGH SEAS
February 4, 2004 (IWPR Albania) Lack of funds, surveillance
equipment and official corruption hamper task of controlling the
illegal trade in people and drugs.
At dawn, an ageing Chinese diving ship, bought by the Albanian navy
for use as a patrol vessel, scours the coastline off the depressed
port of Vlora in southern Albania, searching for human traffickers.
The tough sailors on board are on the lookout for inflatable smuggling
speedboats like the one that sank in the early hours of January
9, causing the deaths from exposure of 20 Albanians from poverty-stricken
Shkodra.
Their speedboat had been designed to carry eight people. Instead,
it left Vlora in high seas, groaning under the weight of 38 passengers.
All were illegal immigrants desperate to get across the 65-kilometre
stretch of water to Italy.
With no life jackets or flares to attract coast guards, more than
half the people on board disappeared under 15-foot waves.
Ilir Manco, commander of the Vlora naval district, admits that even
when his vessels spot one of the tiny boats ¯ which is unlikely
in the poor visibility in the dark - there is precious little they
can do about it. They are not fast enough to pursue the boats, and
have no authority to use the twin 14mm canon placed on the foredeck.
_The smugglers cross in rough seas at night and when the seas are
up the boats are invisible to radar and the naked eye, Manco said.
_Even if the boats are spotted they move at between 35 and 70 knots,
which is far faster than most of our boats. Sometimes they even
outpace helicopters.
The Balkans has always been a crossing point for civilisations and
cultures, but since the collapse of communism in Yugoslavia and
Albania the region has assumed a new role as a transit route for
traffickers in people and narcotics.
No solution relying purely on heightened security can stem the smuggling
of people, drugs and cigarettes. Poverty is what drives the trade.
According to the World Bank, Albania is Europes poorest country.
Almost a quarter of Albanians are registered as unemployed; many
more do not earn a living wage. Only 18 per cent of the population
enjoys a regular electrical supply and only one in six households
has constant running water.
Women are trafficked into the Balkans from Ukraine, Moldova, Russia
and Romania, then moved through Central Europe or across the Adriatic
or Ionian seas to Italy.
Illegal immigrants come from the Balkans and the former Soviet Union
but also from as far as the Kurdish lands and Afghanistan. Their
desire to get into the EU is a lucrative business, and each passenger
pays 1,300-1,500 euro, according to Albanian police sources. The
trafficking of heroin and contraband and counterfeit cigarettes
is a huge business, run in parallel with human smuggling activities.
The Albanian navy is teaming up with its better-equipped Italian
counterpart to tackle the problem. But the gangs ruthless tactics
make it difficult to stop the smugglers boats once they have left
shore.
The Albanian government is stepping up its efforts to stop the smugglers.
_Until the government cracked down in 2003, the speedboats used
to wait in the harbour like taxis. It was completely open, one man
said in a Vlora cafe.
Now the boats are hidden, but as the recent tragedy shows, the smugglers
remain determined to move their illicit cargoes.
Commander Mancos work is restricted by lack of funds and equipment.
_Our boats are limited in speed and although the Americans and Italians
have donated some boats, we lack spare parts. On some, the rudders
have never worked, he said.
A common ruse of the smugglers is to throw off their pursuers by
hurling their human cargo into the sea, obliging the security forces
to pick them up as the smugglers speed off.
Lack of resources is not the only factor preventing the authorities
from catching the traffickers. Corrupt officials also turn a blind
eye at frontier crossing points. The rash of incongruously flashy
and empty apartment buildings springing up on Vloras run-down
streets suggests some people have large sums of cash to clean, as
do the new BMWs and Mercedes cruising the grimy boulevards with
blacked-out windows.
On January 20, Ilir Rrokaj, head of traffic police in Vlora, was
arrested on suspicion of organising the smuggling ring. Artur Rrokaj,
one of the surviving smugglers from the January 9 tragedy, turned
out to be the son of a police chief ¯ from the lawless Shkoder
region, where many of the victims came from.
Erion Veliaj, of _Mjaft (_Enough), a civic action group, says the
immigrants tragedy is directly linked to corruption. _Low-ranking
police officers are paid on average euro 100 a month, and as such
the probability of one being bribed is very high, he said.
But in this case, he adds, senior officers were involved in organising
the smuggling ring; the rank and file merely obeyed orders.
To control Albanias land borders is as hard as guarding the
high seas. Albanian border guards each have to patrol 25 km of mountainous
terrain on average, and on foot. They seldom have vehicles or hi-tech
gadgets, such as ground motion sensors or night vision goggles,
to help them do their jobs.
In the last month, two episodes have thrown light on these normally
obscure multi-billion dollar illicit businesses.
On January 30-31, Albanian and UN Police seized a huge, 55 kilogramme
haul of heroin in two raids on the Kosovo border with Serbia and
Montenegro and in Kukes, in northern Albania.
Marco Nicovic, an attorney and former chief of Belgrade police,
told IWPR that up to 95 per cent of the land routes from Turkey,
where opium is refined into heroin, pass through the Balkans on
their way to western markets. _Three-to-four tonnes of heroin transits
the region every month, he said.
Nicovic outlined two main routes; one running via Nis in southern
Serbia, then westwards into Kosovo and Albania and across the sea
to Italy, or northwards via Belgrade or Zagreb into the EU and US.
The Albanian groups have links in Turkey, Kosovo and the diaspora
in Western Europe and the US, which means they control a high-quality
smuggling channel, he said, but they work closely with Serbs, Montenegrins
and Russians.
In the world of crime, Nicovic adds, politics and history count
for little. Power and profit are all that matter. Nor are the gangs
specialised. Once they have the infrastructure to cross borders
they move heroin one day, women the next, and cigarettes the day
after.
While the Balkan lands bestride the dividing line between rich and
poor, it will always offer an opportunity for those who are desperate
to get rich fast, or get out as fast as possible.
The Albanian naval patrols are a start. But the dawning of a prosperity
that touches ordinary people is the only real answer to the smuggling
phenomenon, and that will not happen overnight.
From: http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/bcr3/bcr3_200402_479_2_eng.txt
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