Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar says she is not surprised that the United States’ indictment of Venezuela President Nicolás Maduro contains allegations that Caribbean politicians were complicit in the cocaine trafficking trade.
The Superseding Indictment document, which contains the Grand Jury charges against Maduro and others, claims that Caribbean politicians benefited financially from these traffickers in return for protection against the law.
Asked for her reaction to this accusation, the Prime Minister said, “I’m not surprised at all. As the story continues to unfold, I have no doubt that many “respectable” and “celebrated” people across all sectors of society will be exposed."
The document specifically states that the defendant, Maduro, and “corrupt” members of his regime enabled corruption fuelled by drug trafficking throughout the region.
It also says that cocaine trafficking through Honduras, Guatemala and Mexico was underpinned by systemic corruption, with traffickers bribing politicians for protection, while those illicit funds were used by political figures to strengthen and entrench their power.
Turning to the Caribbean, the document states, “So, too, were politicians along the 'Caribbean route' corrupted by cocaine traffickers, who would pay them for protection from arrest and to allow favoured traffickers to operate with impunity as they trafficked cocaine from Venezuela north towards the United States.
“Thus, at every step, relying on the producers in Colombia, nine transporters and distributors in Venezuela, and recipients and re-distributors on transhipment points north, the traffickers enriched themselves and their corrupt benefactors who protected and aided them.”
