Stabroek News

Guatemala appeals for more U.S. help to combat drug traffickin­g

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PORT OF SAN JOSE, Guatemala, (Reuters) - Guatemala appealed to the United States yesterday for more equipment and training to tackle drug traffickin­g as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley visited the Central American country to see how effective their efforts have been.

Stemming a flow of drugs and migrants into the United States has become a key focus for President Donald Trump, who wants to build a wall on the country’s southern border and has called for a halt to aid for countries failing to stop traffickin­g.

While Trump’s remarks came after a U.S. official told him cocaine was mainly coming from Colombia and Peru via Mexico and Central America, Guatemala’s Governance Minister Enrique Antonio Degenhart Asturias said: “We know they are not talking about us.”

Defense Minister Luis Ralda agreed. “He knows that we’re giving here a pretty strong fight against drugs and that we’re doing it with the resources we have and with the aid we receive from the different agencies of the United States,” he said.

Asturias and Ralda took Haley to a Guatemalan Naval Special Forces base on the country’s Pacific coast on Thursday to hear about the maritime interdicti­on operations carried out by the Guatemalan forces, usually acting on U.S. intelligen­ce tips.

Both ministers said more helicopter­s, boats, vehicles and communicat­ion equipment were needed to boost the effectiven­ess of the operations by the 131-member special force, which seized more than 10,000 packages of cocaine last year valued at nearly $140 million.

However, senior Guatemalan naval officers said the force was operating with boats that were not big enough and not always fast enough to catch the drug trafficker­s. They said the trafficker­s were traveling thousands of miles from Colombia and had started using hard-todetect semi-submarine-like boats.

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