UN and Partners Unveil Programme to Combat West Africa’s Growing Drug Trade
New York, Dec 16 2010 3:10PM
With drug traffickers in West Africa increasingly adjusting their tactics to avoid counter-narcotics efforts, the United
Nations and partner organizations today launched a comprehensive, integrated programme to combat drug trafficking and
organized crime in the region.
The programme – the UN Office on Drugs and Crime Regional Programme for West Africa 2010-2014 – covers 16 countries and
will respond to the needs of West African countries on the principle of shared responsibility, addressing the
transcontinental nature of the challenge, in particular, the transatlantic route. It will focus on peace building,
security sector reform, and national and regional institution- and capacity-building; as well as strengthening action in
the areas of organized crime, trafficking and terrorism, justice and integrity, drug prevention and health as well as
awareness raising and research.
The UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) has often raised the alarm over narcotics trafficking in West Africa, noting
that the problem has been compounded by widespread corruption and money-laundering.
In its 2009 report on transnational drug-smuggling, UNODC estimated that up to 100 tons of cocaine might have transited
through West Africa that year. In some cases, the value of trafficking flows through the region surpasses the gross
domestic products of the countries in West Africa, which are among the world's poorest countries.
The launch of the West Africa programme took place at a high-level meeting at UN Headquarters in New York, co-chaired by
UNODC, the UN Office for West Africa and the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), and in cooperation with
the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations, the UN Department of Political Affairs and the International Criminal
Police Organization, better known as INTERPOL.
“The added value of UNODC facilitating the entire process will certainly lie in its particular mandate and experience,
as well as in its role within the UN system as the main international forum to address crime and drug trafficking as a
threat to international security at the global level,” the Executive Director of UNODC, Yury Fedotov, said at the
launch. Established in 1997, UNODC is the UN agency charged with assisting countries in their struggle against illicit
drugs, crime and terrorism.
Mr. Fedotov said that West Africa has become a hub for cocaine trafficking from Latin America to Europe, with its and
widespread poverty and geographic location halfway between the two continents making it particularly attractive to
narcotics smugglers and other organized criminal networks.
He also noted that West Africa is a major transit route for counterfeit medicines, the smuggling of commodities and
people for sexual exploitation, and risked becoming a major safe haven for terrorists if the narcotics trafficking
problem remained unaddressed. Drug use has also been on the rise in the region, Mr. Fedotov added.
The Special Representative of the Secretary-General for West Africa, Said Djinnit, described the programme as a “strong
and effective alliance” of countries and organizations against organized crime in a region that “has been under severe
attack by drug trafficking networks.”
“The fight against drug trafficking and organized crime was an essential pillar for any conflict prevention and peace
building strategy in West Africa,” said Mr. Djinnit said at the launch. “The UNODC Regional Programme will be key to
streamlining support for the ECOWAS regional plan of action and efforts at combating this global threat to peace and
security.”
The regional programme is a culmination of an ECOWAS ministerial conference in Cape Verde in 2008, which resulted in a
political declaration and regional action plan to combat drug trafficking and organized crime in West Africa. That
meeting, followed by a multi-agency West Africa Coast Initiative, gave the impetus to the creation of the regional
programme launched today.
ENDS