Arab News

Profiting from traffickin­g

Experts view Lebanon’s stated fight against drug smuggling originatin­g in the Bekaa Valley and Syria as an uphill battle

- Najia Houssari Beirut, Lebanon

Lebanese security forces say they have launched dozens of operations in recent months in search of laboratori­es manufactur­ing Captagon pills, while closely monitoring coastal and land borders with

Syria in an effort to identify smuggling routes.

There is a partnershi­p between Hezbollah and Syria in terms of manufactur­ing and smuggling drugs.

Some smugglers have political and ideologica­l background­s and want to use drugs to target their opponent’s society.

The country’s fight against drugs, though, is an uphill battle, amid multiple overlappin­g crises, notably its economic collapse and political paralysis. And the elephant in the room is Hezbollah: Many suspect the Iran-backed Lebanese militant group facilitate­s the illicit drug trade to finance its operations while maintainin­g plausible deniabilit­y.

Captagon is an amphetamin­e, and one of the most commonly used drugs on Middle East battlefiel­ds.

Combatants addicted to the narcotic say it helps them stay awake for days and numbs their senses, giving them stamina for long battles and allowing them to kill with abandon.

Owing to its ability to make users energetic and happy, Captagon is known to have also become a popular recreation­al drug in the wider region.

Since Saudi Arabia’s customs authoritie­s thwarted an attempt in April to smuggle more than five million Captagon pills from Lebanon into the Kingdom, hidden inside a shipment of pomegranat­es, officials say criminal syndicates have become even more “brazen.”

It was after this consignmen­t of Captagon was discovered that Saudi Arabia suspended shipments of Lebanese fruit and vegetables entering the Kingdom or transiting through its territory.

At the time, Lebanese authoritie­s said “the drug-stuffed shipment entered Lebanon from Syria and was repackaged in an area of the Bekaa Valley before being shipped to the port of Jeddah.”

Two Syrian brothers were arrested in Lebanon soon after the discovery, accused of repackagin­g the shipment at an abandoned warehouse in Bekaa. But even this major bust was not enough to put the smugglers out of business.

On June 15, Lebanon’s Internal Security Forces (ISF) thwarted another attempt to smuggle 37.2 kg of Captagon pills into Saudi Arabia via Beirut’s Rafic Hariri Internatio­nal Airport, hidden inside a consignmen­t of electric water pumps.

Three people were arrested, including the alleged ringleader, a stateless person with a history of drug smuggling, along with a Syrian and a Lebanese.

The ISF’s best efforts, though, were not enough. Saudi authoritie­s at the port of Jeddah announced another major drug bust on June 26, seizing an estimated 14 million Captagon pills hidden inside iron plates sent from Lebanon.

On June 29, Lebanese authoritie­s seized another haul of Captagon pills also destined for Saudi Arabia. In a statement, the ISF said 17.4 kg, the equivalent of 100,000 pills, were seized. Two Lebanese and one Syrian national were reportedly arrested.

Hatem Madi, a former Lebanese public prosecutor, told Arab News: “The Captagon pill trade became active because it is easier to smuggle, and faster.

“It is subject to supply and demand. There is no doubt that the war in Syria has left the door open for smugglers and drug trafficker­s.”

Indeed, Lebanon has become a major smuggling corridor for Captagon pills manufactur­ed in Syria. Even before the country’s descent into civil war in 2011, its territory was used by Lebanese militias to cultivate and smuggle marijuana, generating millions of dollars.

“Captagon is manufactur­ed in Syria, especially in the regions of Homs and Aleppo,” Brig. Gen. Anwar Yahya, a former head of Lebanon’s judicial police, told Arab News.

“In light of the events taking place in Syria, some of the factories have relocated to the villages found between Lebanon and Syria on the Anti-Lebanon Mountain Range and in the areas of Qusair and Tufail.”

Western intelligen­ce analysts claim Hezbollah operatives began manufactur­ing Captagon more than a decade ago but the drug began to gain prominence in tandem with the militia’s expanding commitment­s in Middle East conflicts.

“Is Hezbollah involved in manufactur­ing Captagon pills? This issue requires a judicial or security source,” Yahya told Arab News.

“However, the judiciary in Lebanon is silent. Is it out of fear or is the judiciary hiding something? I have no idea, but we are aware of the investigat­ions and know who is involved.”

What is beyond doubt is that the Bekaa Valley, bordering Syria, is a Hezbollah hotbed. It has training camps in the region’s highlands and controls its own border crossings with Syria, where it has intervened in support of the Assad regime.

The most prominent person to be arrested by Lebanese authoritie­s in Bekaa in connection with Captagon is Hassan Daqou. Dubbed the “King of Captagon,” Daqou had several business interests in Tufail, a town that overlaps the border with Syria and is controlled by Hezbollah.

However, following a local land dispute, Daqou was turned

over to the Lebanese army, accused of establishi­ng a Captagon laboratory in the area and overseeing a smuggling network sending pills to Greece and Saudi Arabia.

“Daqou has ties with Hezbollah and the Fourth Division, which is headed by Maher Assad, the Syrian president’s brother,” Mohammed Al-Hujairi, a Future Movement MP, told Arab News.

But what interest might Hezbollah have in the production and traffickin­g of drugs?

“There are unusual smugglers that have a political or ideologica­l background,” Ashraf Rifi, a former ISF director general who later served as Lebanon’s justice minister, told Arab News. “They do not work according to profit or loss considerat­ions. Instead, they have political goals, namely targeting the opponent’s society.”

Whether or not the drugs trade has been weaponized, it is certainly consuming a lot of the Lebanese government’s time and resources. According to one security source, measures taken by the security forces in recent years have led to the arrest of over 15,000 people.

Rifi said there had been seizures “unpreceden­ted in the history of Interpol in regards to the quantities of narcotics being smuggled and the level of brazenness when it comes to smuggling and targeting.

“There is a partnershi­p between Hezbollah and the Syrian side in terms of manufactur­ing and smuggling, while smuggling may also be undertaken unilateral­ly by one of the sides,” he said.

“The efforts aimed at countering drug smuggling from Lebanon require a wise administra­tion. A corrupt administra­tion that is subservien­t to Hezbollah makes a show of addressing the problem, but it does not actually defend the people or the interests of the country,” Rifi added.

Yahya believes Lebanon’s counternar­cotics unit, a badly under-resourced and poorly utilized force, is fighting with one hand tied behind its back.

“Unfortunat­ely, the judicial police anti-drug office, which has files that date back dozens of years and include photos and fingerprin­ts of the people and networks involved, is being sidelined,” he told Arab News.

“Instead, we see that the bodies handling these cases are the ISF Informatio­n Division, the customs, the army or people that have no jurisdicti­on over such issues.”

Yahya wants Lebanese authoritie­s to tighten control along the borders, at the airport and seaports; equip border control personnel with scanners; activate the work of the anti-drug office and provide it with the necessary tools and staff.

More broadly, Lebanon must address its economic collapse and its ability to support its security personnel, who need to provide for their families.

“The delay in the government’s formation,” he said, “is a major, and possibly the main, obstacle standing in the way of activating the security apparatus and the role of the army.”

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 ?? AFP ?? Western intelligen­ce analysts believe that Hezbollah operatives (below) have been involved with manufactur­ing Captagon for more than a decade.
AFP Western intelligen­ce analysts believe that Hezbollah operatives (below) have been involved with manufactur­ing Captagon for more than a decade.
 ?? AFP ?? Lebanon’s
ISF claims it interrupts attempts to smuggle Captagon pills (right) around the Middle East.
AFP Lebanon’s ISF claims it interrupts attempts to smuggle Captagon pills (right) around the Middle East.

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