The Borneo Post

Three decades a er Pablo Escobar’s death, drugs ravage Medellin

- Juan Sebastian Serrano

MEDELLÍN, Colombia: Three decades a er cartel boss Pablo Escobar was shot dead by police on a roo op in Medellin, the very city he had sought to upli with drug money is being ravaged by it.Junkies frequent hundreds of sales points do ed around Colombia’s second city, which has become the epicentre of the domestic drug trade.

“Easy access? Yes, absolutely. In Medellin you can find it anywhere. Even on the floor you find drugs,” Manue Morales, an out-of-work engineer and chronic user of ‘basuco’ – the cheapest drug on the market – told AFP.

Basuco is derived from the coca leaf also used to make cocaine, and mixed with other low-grade substances.

His hands shaking, 32-year-old Morales inhaled a dose in a public park, using a pipe fashioned from a PVC tube, even as pedestrian­s and police milled around.

“I am a bit nervous,” he confessed.

“The truth is that one is less cautious and it (the basuco) can cause you to do stupid things,” said Morales, who lost his job due to drug use.

Four brief months later, all his worldly belongings fit into a worn briefcase, and he o en sleeps rough.

Morales’s downfall, he said, started at a so-called ‘vice plaza’ – drug vending points that numbered about 160 in Medellin ten years ago, according to police.

Researcher­s estimate the figure is now closer to 800.

In 2013, some 3.5 per cent of Colombians said they had ever taken an illegal substance, according to the state statistics agency.

By 2019, the number had almost tripled to 9.7 per cent.

With aid from the United States, leader in the global ‘war on drugs’, a Colombian crackdown since the early 2000s has forced trafficker­s to look homeward.

“A concentrat­ion of product was generated... that could not be exported due to this strong antidrug policy,” said toxicologi­st Juan Carlos Sanchez.

Domestic clients, however, are not ge ing the best of what the world’s largest cocaine exporter has to offer.

Instead, they are ge ing hooked on cheaper, low-quality and o en dangerous drugs.

With 2.2 million inhabitant­s, Medellin is today the city with the highest drug consumptio­n – 15.5 per cent – in Colombia.

The Medellin city council estimates that each drug ‘plaza’ can make up to US$75,000 a month – the equivalent of some 300 minimum salary earners.

But authoritie­s say the increase in domestic drug use has gone hand-in-hand with rising insecurity.

Since 2018, more than 2,500 people have been killed in gang wars nationally, police general Herman Bustamante told AFP.

Official data does not distinguis­h between gangster and civilian deaths.

Mafia peace

In Medellin, the numbers reveal a paradox.

In 1992, at the height of the search for Escobar, the city’s homicide rate was 350 per 100,000. Last year it was down to 15.5, even as drug use has surged.

According to Luis Fernando Quijano of social developmen­t NGO Corpades, this was more telling of a ‘mafia peace’ than of any real progress.

There were ‘pacts’, he said, between narco gangs and some local authoritie­s to allow drug trade in exchange for relative security in their areas.

“When seizures are made... it is o en not the product of (police) intelligen­ce,” Quijano added.

“They are delivered (by the narcos) to create the image that... the security strategy is working.”

Bustamante conceded that some police have been arrested for colluding with trafficker­s, without giving numbers.

 ?? — AFP photos ?? Aerial view of a street where drugs are sold in downtown Medellin, Colombia.
— AFP photos Aerial view of a street where drugs are sold in downtown Medellin, Colombia.
 ?? ?? A man prepares a powder known as Tussi or pink cocaine.
A man prepares a powder known as Tussi or pink cocaine.
 ?? ?? A drug addict walks in a street of downtown, Medellin.
A drug addict walks in a street of downtown, Medellin.
 ?? ?? A drug dealer shows cocaine and marijuana packages.
A drug dealer shows cocaine and marijuana packages.

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