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Britain: Behind the row over Jamaican "drug mules"
By Julie Hyland
11 January 2002
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A row erupted in December over so-called Jamaican drug
mules. It flared after British customs officers and police
mounted a joint operation against airline passengers arriving
in London from the Caribbean island. On December 12, 16 Jamaicans
were arrested on suspicion of having swallowed cocaine packages,
and five days later, 22 Jamaicans were charged with attempting
to smuggle a Class A drug, after disembarking from
an Air Jamaica flight.
Following the arrests, Phil Sinkinson, the British Deputy High
Commissioner in Jamaica, said that a newspaper report alleging
one in 10 passengers from Jamaica were smuggling drugs could be
an underestimate. Dozens on each flight from the Jamaican capital
Kingston could be involved, he suggested.
But leading black representatives in the UK denounced Sinkinson
for stirring up racial tension. Trevor Phillips, deputy leader
of the Greater London Council, argued that Sinkinson was indulging
in scare mongering, which could mean Jamaicans becoming
increasingly reluctant to help the police detect those few
who are coming in with drugs. Phillips complained, Perfectly
innocent Jamaicans will find that this is going to
be used to harry them, to hinder them, to hold them up at airports.
In response, Jamaican narcotics police supported Sinkinsons
statement, saying umpteen drugs couriers are travelling
from Jamaica to the UK. Some reports placed the figure as
being over 50 percent of passengers travelling to Britain.
Jamaica does not produce cocaine, but is a major conduit for
its distribution worldwide. Much of the narcotic imported into
Jamaica is destined for the European market, especially Britain
where a kilogram of cocaine can sell for many times its wholesale
value. On top of this, the tightening of security procedures in
the US following September 11 has diverted more drugs traffic
to Britain and Europe. The Observer newspaper reports that
prior to the attacks on New York and Washington, 50 percent of
all drugs intercepted from airline traffic in the US came from
Jamaica.
Behind the present controversy, and the now repeated demands
for increased security and police measures, the more pressing
issues raised by the drug mules scare has gone largely
unreported.
What has led to so many ordinary Jamaicans becoming embroiled
in the drugs trade? The simple answer is that although the sun-seeking
tourists who visit may see the lush Caribbean island as a tropical
paradise, Jamaica is an economic and social nightmare for many
of its inhabitants.
According to the CIA World Factbook, almost one-third
of the islands 2.5 million population live below the poverty
line. This figure, which is only an estimate, is actually 10 years
out of date. Given that the last decade has seen a precipitous
economic decline on the island, with unemployment growing to almost
20 percent, the actual figure is much higher.
For decades the islands main sources of income have been
bauxite (mined for aluminium) and tourism. During the 1990s, in
scenes replayed around the world, the Jamaican government began
dismantling national economic controls in a bid to attract greater
foreign investment. In 1992, the incoming Peoples National
Party (PNP) government of Prime Minister Percival James Patterson
eliminated price controls and began privatising state industries.
The change was especially devastating for this small island,
resulting in many factories being closed, whilst falling commodity
prices hit the bauxite industry, which accounts for 53 percent
of Jamaicas exports. In addition, the development of the
North Atlantic Free Trade Area, involving the US, Canada and Mexico,
saw the island increasingly sidelined.
With a burgeoning foreign debt of $3.2 billion$1,216
for every person living in Jamaicathe government stepped
up its bid to increase tourism (which has become the islands
main provider of foreign exchange), particularly from the US,
which accounts for 71 percent of all visitors. Even before September
11, however, Jamaica was losing out to other Caribbean islands.
Poverty and political corruption have fuelled an explosion
in crime and crime-related violence. Jamaica has one of the highest
homicide rates in the world, with more than 1,100 people murdered
in 2001, an increase of 28 percent on the previous year and the
highest annual number ever recorded.
Many of the islands rival gangs are affiliated to either
the PNP or the Jamaica Labor Party (JLP) led by Edward Seaga.
Inter-gang violence is especially intense during election periods.
In 1980, for example, approximately 700 people were killed in
election-related violence. The gangs also control the islands
lucrative drug trade.
Jamaicas army and police have been given a free hand
to enforce law and order in the ghettos. In July last year, for
example, troops backed by helicopter gunships and tanks strafed
a poor neighbourhood that has suffered repeated gang violence.
At least 27 people were killed in this operation, including several
children. According to Human rights group Amnesty International,
Jamaica has the highest per capita number of police killings per
year.
In response to business complaints, police were also directed
to round up the homeless and mentally ill men and women found
on the streets in the popular tourist destination of Montego Bay.
They were said to be spoiling the resorts image. Last September,
the government was forced to agree to compensate a group of 32
people who had been victims of such a dragnet. They had been tied
up and bussed almost 100 kilometres away, where they were left
near a toxic waste site.
The glaring contrast between the luxurious tourist facilities
and the ghettos that are home to many Jamaicans has fuelled social
antagonisms.
Average annual per capita income is just US$2,430, with schools
and hospital services beyond the reach of many. Such is the dilapidated
state of much of Jamaicas non-tourist infrastructure that
many inhabitants are without reliable supplies of drinking water.
It was against this background that increased fuel duties and
a new round of austerity measures saw a significant growth in
civil unrest and riots in many neighbourhoods last year, which
were brutally put down by the police and army.
In his remarks, High Commissioner Sinkinson was forced to acknowledge
a link between the growing trade in cocaine trafficking and the
islands economic decline. Most of the smugglers come
from areas of pretty desperate poverty, he said. The
risks are quite high, but in real terms the rewards for the couriers
are equally high.
Jamaican drug mules are reportedly paid between
US$2,880 and US$7,200 for each trip. Most of the smugglers are
women, and many are single parents struggling to raise three or
four children and finance them through school. Others are coerced
by threats of violence to act as couriers.
Some women conceal up to 100 wraps of cocaine about
their person, or swallow and/or insert the packages into other
body orifices, placing themselves at great risk. In October, a
30-year-old woman died on a flight from Kingston to Heathrow when
one of the 55 packages she had in her stomach burst.
Tighter security measures and tougher sentences mean that 34
percent of all women prisoners in England and Wales are now Jamaicans
who have been convicted of drug smuggling, according to a report
in the Times newspaper. The minimum sentence handed out
to these unfortunate women is six years, with some receiving up
to 10 years imprisonment, leaving many of their children separated
from their mothers with no adequate care. After serving their
time they are deported back to Jamaica.
None of these repressive measures have done anything to quell
the drugs trade, because nothing has been done to ameliorate the
desperate poverty which the criminal gangs can exploit to their
own ends.
On January 3, the World Bank announced a meagre US$75 million
Emergency Economic Rehabilitation Loan to Jamaica
(less than $30 for each inhabitant). According to Orsalia Kalantzopoulos,
director of the World Banks programme in the Caribbean,
Within the short span of six months, Jamaica has had to
confront violence in Kingston, significant damage to agriculture
and infrastructure due to flooding associated with Hurricane Michelle
and, above all, a drastic loss of revenue in Jamaicas tourism
industry following the tragic attacks of September 11. But
the loan is dependent upon stepping up precisely the type of free
market, austerity measures that are impoverishing so many of the
islands inhabitants.
See Also:
Racial
Violence & Immigrant Issues in Britain
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