Paraguay Dismisses Ministers over Links to Drug Trafficking Suspects
Paraguay’s president dismissed last week two ministers who
were allegedly linked to organized crime. The move came after police dismantled
a gang allegedly responsible for shipping about 21 tonnes of cocaine to Europe.
Paraguay’s President Mario Abdo Benítez sacked on Thursday
the head of the National Emergency Agency, Joaquin Roa, who had bought a yacht
from one of the suspects arrested during the police operation that was carried
out with the help of Europol, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and an
Anti-Drug Unit from Uruguay.
Two days before, Abdo Benítez removed Interior Minister
Arnaldo Giuzzio over his alleged ties with a Brazilian drug trafficker who was
arrested two weeks ago in Foz do Iguaçu, a Brazilian city across the border
from Ciudad del Este.
The dismissals came after Paraguayan authorities arrested eight
suspected members of a gang linked to about 21 tonnes of drugs that were seized
at various times in Antwerp, Rotterdam, Paraguay and Uruguay.
Police also raided several locations, seizing assets worth
more than US$100 million, including luxury real estate, nine planes, 24 fancy
cars, weapons, three yachts and thousands of cattle, Paraguay's National
Anti-Drug Secretariat (SENAD) announced on Twitter.
U.S. Chief of Mission in Paraguay, Joseph Salazar, said that
the operation was “one of the biggest blows to organized crime in Paraguay in
recent times. We applaud the efforts of the National Anti-Drug Secretariat and
prosecutors for their commitment to combat this scourge.”
“Operation ‘A Ultranza Py’ is the largest operation against
money laundering from drug trafficking in the country’s history,” SENAD
official Zully Rolón said.
The gang allegedly moved cocaine by air from the producing
countries, especially Bolivia, through Paraguay, where the drugs were concealed
in containers on ships headed from the country’s river ports to Europe and
Africa.
The group is believed to have been led by Uruguayan drug
trafficker with a Paraguayan passport, Sebastián Enrique Marset Cabrera, who
was arrested in late 2021 at the Dubai airport.
Miguel Insfrán, alias Tío Rico, was allegedly responsible
for providing the trucks for the transport of the drugs, while the
father-in-law of Senator Sergio Godoy was in charge of air logistics.
In addition, Alberto Koube Ayala, a cattle rancher,
allegedly laundered the drug money through the several businesses he owned. He
was arrested just one block from his home on Tuesday in Paraguay’s capital.
Another gang member identified as evangelical pastor José
Insfrán allegedly laundered the money through churches, properties, hotels, and
radio stations.
Paraguay has emerged as a crucial link in the transnational
cocaine supply chain between South America and Europe and Africa. A news outlet
recently said in an op-ed that the Latin American country “is acquiring the
characteristics of a narco-state.”
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