Drug
Trafficking
Threatens
Costa
Rica's
National
Parks
MANUEL
ANTONIO
(Reuters)
-
The
lush
national
parks
of
Costa
Rica
have
long
attracted
tourists
from
around
the
globe
with
their
evergreen
rainforests,
white
beaches
and
thermal
springs.
Recently,
they
have
lured
more
unsavory
visitors
in
the
form
of
drug
traffickers.

Organized
crime
cartels
have
turned
to
Costa
Rica's
treasured
nature
reserves
as
governments
wage
military
offensives
against
the
gangs
throughout
Mexico
and
Central
America.
In
the
mangrove
swamps
and
jungles,
the
traffickers
have
found
a
vast,
sparsely
populated
and
thinly
policed
paradise
that
they
can
use
as a
stop-off
point
on
their
way
to
smuggle
Colombian
cocaine
to
the
United
States.
They
also
increasingly
grow
marijuana
amid
the
cedar
and
lemonwood
trees.
Costa
Rica
prides
itself
on
not
having
a
standing
army
but
the
incursion
has
put
lightly
armed
park
rangers
into
the
frontline
of
the
drug
war
as
they
struggle
to
prevent
hikers
and
swimmers
bumping
into
any
rude
surprises.
In
January,
the
Coast
Guard
was
called
in
for
an
unprecedented
seizure
of
almost
1
ton
of
cocaine
found
in
swampy
mud
in
the
Palo
Seco
park.
The
drugs
would
have
been
worth
about
$100
million
on
the
U.S.
streets.
In
total,
Costa
Rican
authorities
seized
more
than
6.6
tons
of
cocaine
in
the
first
half
of
this
year
both
in
and
out
of
parks,
compared
to
less
than
3
tons
in
the
same
period
last
year.
In
all
of
last
year,
8.9
tons
of
cocaine
was
seized.
Park
rangers
have
also
uncovered
dozens
of
gangster
encampments,
complete
with
food
supplies.
"Drug
traffickers
come
in,
make
new
pathways
into
the
park
for
their
trucks
and
set
up
their
camps,
waiting
for
drug
shipments
to
come
in
by
boat,"
said
Carlos
Martinez,
head
of
police
in
Quepos,
a
town
near
Costa
Rica's
most
popular
park
Manuel
Antonio,
80
miles
(130
km)
from
the
capital
of
San
Jose.
"We've
found
gasoline
containers,
remains
of
water
and
food
supplies
and
canvas
used
to
cover
up
the
drugs.
They've
even
made
themselves
some
benches
to
sit
down
and
chat."
BALLOON
EFFECT
Drug
cartel
expansion
into
Costa
Rican
parks
is
seen
as
part
of a
'balloon'
effect
of
the
narcotics
trade,
which
has
been
attacked
by
military
offensives
in
Mexico,
Colombia,
Honduras
and
Guatemala.
"You
squeeze
the
balloon
in
the
south,
then
you
squeeze
it
at
the
top
and
what
you
get
is
pressure
in
the
center,
so
even
if
it's
not
the
capos
themselves
that
are
moving
down
here,
the
cartels'
operations
are
extending
to
Central
America,"
Costa
Rica's
anti-drug
czar
Mauricio
Boraschi
said.
Police
say
the
smuggling
is
carried
out
mainly
by
Mexican
cartels,
including
the
Sinaloa
Cartel,
La
Familia
and
the
Gulf
Cartel.
Last
month,
Costa
Rican
police
arrested
the
alleged
head
of
the
Gulf
Cartel's
operations
in
all
Central
America,
Juan
Manuel
Garcia,
in
San
Jose.
Traffickers
bring
large
amounts
of
cocaine
out
of
Colombia's
Pacific
port
of
Buenaventura
from
where
they
can
sail
straight
into
parks
like
Manuel
Antonio,
which
has
large
stretches
of
Pacific
beach,
Boraschi
says.
They
can
then
continue
their
route
north
on
the
Pan-American
Highway,
or
organize
further
trips
up
the
Pacific
coast.
Costa
Rica
abolished
its
army
in
1948,
a
move
that
is
celebrated
annually,
so
the
Central
American
nation
is
unable
to
pursue
a
Mexican
or
Colombian-style
military
crackdown.
However,
the
Costa
Rican
government
has
strengthened
cooperation
with
the
United
States
Navy
in
hitting
traffickers
in
the
South
Pacific.
It
also
recently
levied
a
special
tax
on
businesses
to
raise
$70
million
for
anti-drug
efforts,
including
special
police
units.
U.S.
Drug
Enforcement
Administration
spokesman
Michael
Rothermund
said
local
DEA
agents
worked
closely
with
Costa
Rica's
judicial
and
drug
control
police.
"Costa
Rica
has
been
a
good
partner
in
this
fight",
said
Eric
Nelson,
deputy
ambassador
to
the
United
States
in
Costa
Rica.
"We
think
they're
making
good
decisions
like
increasing
their
security
budget
and
combating
corruption."
The
incursion
of
the
drug
trade
has
yet
to
cause
a
spike
in
violence
as
traffickers
try
to
stay
off
officials'
radar,
forgoing
the
attacks
on
security
forces
seen
in
Mexico.
Costa
Rica's
homicide
rate
fell
for
the
first
time
in
six
years
in
2011
to
11.5
murders
for
every
100,000
inhabitants,
bucking
a
trend
of
increasing
violence
in
Central
America.
Honduras,
which
holds
the
title
of
murder
capital
of
the
world,
had
a
rate
of
86
per
100,000
last
year.
LONE
RANGERS
The
cartels
have
not
attacked
national
park
rangers
but
there
is
increasing
concern
about
the
safety
of
travelling
to
distant
corners
of
the
reserves.
"Their
duties
used
to
be
mainly
conservation,
environmental
education
and
looking
after
park
visitors",
says
Rafael
Gutierrez,
head
of
park
rangers
at
the
government's
National
Conservation
Areas
System.
"Now
their
job
has
changed."
Costa
Rica's
28
parks
cover
a
quarter
of
the
national
territory
of
1.5
million
acres,
meaning
there
are
almost
endless
marshes,
mountains
and
jungles
where
traffickers
can
hide.
To
pull
out
the
ton
of
cocaine
in
Palo
Seco
in
January,
officers
spent
an
entire
day
fighting
through
swamp
water
that
went
up
to
their
necks,
battling
mangroves
and
swinging
roots.
Costa
Rica
is
particularly
keen
to
control
the
gang's
incursions
as
the
parks
are
a
major
draw
for
tourists,
with
some
300,000
visitors
annually.
Tourism
generates
some
$2.1
billion
a
year,
roughly
5
percent
of
gross
domestic
product.
"It's
such
a
shame
that
this
has
to
happen",
said
James
Kaiser,
an
American
writing
a
travel
guide
about
Costa
Rica.
"But
as
someone
who
visits
national
parks
I
don't
have
any
reservations
about
visiting
the
most
popular
parts
of
the
parks
because
I
think
those
are
not
the
areas
that
the
drug
traffickers
are
going
to
use."
Police
officer
Martinez
agreed
that
tourists
were
highly
unlikely
to
bump
into
cocaine
smugglers
but
said
they
were
keeping
an
extra
eye
out
for
wandering
visitors
to
make
sure
that
did
not
happen.
"The
biggest
danger
is
that
there
is a
confrontation
between
the
narcos
and
a
tourist,"
police
officer
Martinez
said.
"We're
always
looking
for
the
adventurous
surfer
who
could
get
lost
looking
around
for
the
perfect
wave."