Drug
Traffickers
Threaten
Teachers
in
Limón
Drug
traffickers
in
eastern
Costa
Rica
are
reportedly
keeping
schoolteachers
out
of
an
indigenous
town
in
an
attempt
to
pressure
locals
into
cultivating
marijuana,
pointing
to
criminal
gangs’
increasing
influence
in
the
country.
In a
recent
trip
to
the
eastern
Costa
Rican
province
of
Limón
by
Education
Minister
Leonardo
Garnier
to
mark
the
opening
of
several
public
schools,
La
Nacion
reports
that
local
education
officials
complained
that
teachers
in
the
area
had
been
barred
from
working
by
drug
traffickers.
According
to
these
officials,
the
eight
teachers
named
to
work
at
schools
in
the
village
of
Alto
Telire
have
stayed
away
from
the
town
after
one
of
the
buildings
in
which
they
taught
was
burned
to
the
ground.
It
is
believed
that
a
local
criminal
gang
is
attempting
to
steer
the
community
away
from
school
as
an
alternative
to
marijuana
cultivation
in
the
area.
Guillermo
Rodriguez,
an
indigenous
education
consultant
at
the
Ministerio
de
Educación
Pública
(MEP)
-
Ministry
of
Education,
asserted
that
the
situation
in
Alto
Telire
was
so
dire
that
the
population
had
even
lost
control
of
their
own
food
supply.
Criminal
groups
provide
basic
food
stuffs
to
those
in
the
area
who
grow
marijuana.
Rodriguez
warned
that
it
would
be
impossible
to
bring
proper
education
to
the
area
without
support
from
other
government
institutions
to
regain
sovereignty.
InSight
Crime
Analysis
As
InSight
Crime
has
reported,
despite
Costa
Rica’s
reputation
as
an
oasis
in
the
otherwise
violent
region
of
Central
America,
drug
trafficking
has
emerged
as a
serious
threat
to
stability.
In
2012,
there
has
been
an
apparent
spike
in
drug
trafficking
activity
in
the
country.
In
December,
the
head
of
the
Judicial
Investigation
Police
(OIJ)
warned
that
the
country
had
shifted
from
a
transshipment
point
to a
center
of
negotiation
for
Mexican
and
Colombian
criminal
groups.
The
province
of
Limón
has
historically
been
a
important
location
for
trafficking
in
the
country,
as
its
access
to
the
Caribbean
makes
it
appealing
for
Colombian
trafficking
organizations.
Limon
is
also
marked
by a
lack
of
police
presence,
especially
in
the
remote
Talamanca
county,
where
Alto
Telire
is
located.
In
June,
authorities
destroyed
more
than
562,000
marijuana
plants
in
an
operation
in
Talamanca.
Source:
Insightcrime.org