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Drug kingpin trial ‘ultimate test’ for Dutch rule of law

‘Super cartels’ risk turning Netherland­s into a narco state, writes Julie Capelle

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With shootings and threats against a princess and the prime minister, it all sounds like a crime drama, but for the Dutch the growing menace from drug cartels is all too real.

The top-security trial of one alleged cocaine cartel leader, Ridouan Taghi, has captivated the Netherland­s in recent months and shone a light on the shadowy “Mocro Maffia”.

The busting of a Dubai-based “super cartel” linked to Taghi, which used the Dutch port of Rotterdam as a hub, has further reinforced fears the liberal country could become a so-called narco-state.

Despite being behind bars in an ultra-secure prison, Taghi has been accused of pulling the strings of what prosecutor­s call his “killing machine” with secret messages to henchmen outside.

Commentato­rs say the “Marengo” trial, named after a judicial codeword for the operation that saw Taghi charged with 16 others, is unpreceden­ted for the Netherland­s.

“The consequenc­e of the Marengo trial, and the violence that was committed afterwards, has simply caused a huge shock”, Jan Meeus, a Dutch journalist specialisi­ng in criminal matters, told AFP.

Speaking after a recent hearing, he described it as

“the ultimate test of the Dutch judicial system of the rule of law”.

Three people linked to a key prosecutio­n witness in the trial, Nabil B, have already been killed in scenes that shocked the Netherland­s.

His brother was murdered in 2018, his lawyer Derk Wiersum was shot dead outside his house in 2019, and the prominent Dutch crime journalist Peter R de Vries was killed in 2021.

Shot dead in broad daylight in central Amsterdam as he left a television studio, de Vries had said he was on the hit-list of Taghi, who was arrested in Dubai in 2019.

The army is guarding the “Bunker” in Amsterdam, where Taghi is on trial, in a first for the Netherland­s. Judges and prosecutor­s arrive for hearings inside armoured cars.

Plans to spring Taghi from prison using “extreme violence” were uncovered, said Mr Meeus. Taghi’s cousin and one of his lawyers are accused of helping him communicat­e with the outside world.

“The democratic rule of law is shaken and under pressure from organised crime,” Wim de Bruin, a spokesman for the national prosecutor’s office, told AFP.

The threat has touched top levels of Dutch society.

Crown Princess Amalia, the daughter of King Willem-Alexander, was recently forced to give up plans to live in student accommodat­ion for security reasons.

Both the 19-year-old royal and Prime Minister Mark Rutte were mentioned in messages by organised crime groups, raising fears of plans to kidnap or attack them, Dutch media reported.

Prosecutor­s say the gangsters have “no respect for human life”, with members calling their victims “dogs” who must “sleep”.

Nicknamed “Mocro Maffia” because many are of Moroccan descent, the gang is notorious for both the youth and the merciless violence of its members.

The violence has forced Dutch authoritie­s to confront their own naivety about the level of organised crime in the country, a parallel economy worth several billion dollars.

The main Dutch police union, the NPB, has sounded the alarm for several years, with its president Jan Struijs warning some years ago it was slowly becoming a narco-state.

Mr Struijs told AFP that the Netherland­s’ lenient policy on soft drugs was to blame.

The consumptio­n and sale of cannabis have been decriminal­ised in the country but the rest of the supply chain that stocks famed Dutch “coffeeshop­s” remains illegal, with gangs muscling in on them.

But Marijn Schrijver, co-author of the bestsellin­g book Mocro Maffia, said that while the Netherland­s’ neighbours like to blame its lax soft drug policies, “that is not the reason”.

“What we are is a tax paradise. We want to import as much as possible into the ports to transport it again, and that makes the Netherland­s the perfect place logistical­ly,” Schrijver said.

The recent dismantlin­g in Dubai of the “super-cartel”, which allegedly provided around one third of Europe’s cocaine, indicates that the kingpins may be moving out of the Netherland­s.

A Taghi-linked Dutch “big fish” arrested in the Gulf emirate had reportedly formed an alliance with the leaders of Irish and Italian drug gangs. Europol spokesman Jan Op Gen Oorth said the “fluid” networks now collaborat­e.

 ?? ?? Rutte: On Taghi’s ‘hit list’
Rutte: On Taghi’s ‘hit list’

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