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As the volume of cocaine trafficked into the Netherlands through the port city of Rotterdam increases, so too does the number of young men employed by criminal gangs to retrieve the drugs from among freight arriving from Latin America. The BBC has had a rare glimpse into the dangerous work of these so-called 'cocaine collectors' who provide a vital link in the European narcotics supply chain. On a flickering CCTV screen, a dozen shadowy figures run with military precision in a line towards a shipping container in the port of Rotterdam. Its freight of tropical fruit from Colombia may already have been unloaded, but this metal box - 12m long and identical to so many thousands of others here - still has cargo on board. The collectors' job is to get the drugs out of the container and away from the docks, from where they will be transported to Amsterdam, Berlin and London. Another will say, 'You'll get some of the drugs to sell for yourselves. And this is a business that has exploded. But in the past six months the groups of collectors have got bigger - 10 or 12 people gathered together, and it happens three or four times a week. As the volume of cocaine imported into the Netherlands rises exponentially, the methods used by the collectors are becoming more sophisticated too. Sometimes they don't physically take the cocaine out of the port. Instead their job is to transfer the drug to another container earmarked by the gang with the help of an insider, which will then be transported out of the port by truck. And sometimes the gangs will wait inside the port area for a drugs shipment. We find mattresses, empty bottles of water, food wrappers…'. But biding your time in a 'hotel' container waiting for the coast to be clear can be extremely dangerous. In early September, nine young men found themselves trapped after the door to the shipping container they were hiding inside - partly packed with a freight of tree trunks - became jammed. With panic rising along with the temperature, the collectors dialled for the Dutch emergency services. They were lucky we found them on time. It took four hours. Some of the men were hospitalised with respiratory difficulties. But for security reasons Janse, who has been the chief of police here for seven years, will not reveal how they found the collectors. In , the Rotterdam authorities intercepted more than 5,kg of cocaine in the port. By it was a whopping 41,kg. I'm not proud - it's good we seized the cocaine, but every year there's a larger amount coming in. And the narcotics discovered in the port represent only a tiny fraction of illicit imports. In September, collectors were apprehended in the port area in just over a week. Some collectors even carry cash so that they can pay penalties on the spot in the event that they are stopped. Do I have drugs? Or tools? No, I've got nothing on me. At 42km long, the port of Rotterdam is the largest in Europe. More than 23, freight containers are processed here every day. And central to the work of the cocaine collectors and the criminal organisations they work for is one critical enabler: corruption. You just say to a worker, 'Lend me your pass until tomorrow, and you can earn euros',' says the collector. He could have a container that should be inspected, but he takes it off the inspection list for you. And if an insider refuses to co-operate the collectors use intimidation. Andre Kramer says his employees are under pressure because they are in the sights of those working for organised crime. Ten years ago, it wasn't on the streets. Now the violence is increasing. And the bloody repercussions of the cocaine trade extend nationwide - including the audacious, daylight assassination in Amsterdam in July of the Netherlands' most famous crime journalist, Peter R de Vries. JOZ runs youth projects on Rotterdam's south bank - one of the most deprived urban areas in the Netherlands and where many of the city's cocaine collectors come from. More than a quarter of the population is under 23, and more than half are from a migrant background. In the s and 70s, people from outside the Netherlands settled here, attracted by employment opportunities in the port. But when industrial activity moved west to accommodate the mega-ships and the work dried up, those who could afford to move away did, leaving a large number of low-income households. JOZ works through schools, clubs and in community centres in an attempt to divert young people away from crime. There is a growing number of young men working as cocaine collectors in the Port of Rotterdam. There's talk of a 'white Christmas' in Rotterdam - but no-one is referring to snow. Ahead of the festive season, Hillenaar has a message for cocaine users. Hillenaar hopes a change in the law that comes into force in will be a strong deterrent to the collectors. It dispenses with fines and imposes a prison sentence of up to a year on any unauthorised person found in the port area. But given the vast amounts of hard cash that can be earned as a collector, not everyone is convinced it will work. He's also worried that upping the penalties and threatening a prison sentence may provoke violence in the port area. But it's going to be grim when they will use anything to try and get away - weapons, knives…You don't want some sort of Wild West show going on in your terminal. For some young men, the threat of a jail term may well make them think twice before donning dark clothes, and breaking into one of Rotterdam's container depots. But given the big bucks on offer, others will be less easily deterred. They know they are a vital link in Europe's cocaine chain, and that this is a business that is not going to end any time soon. Skip to content. US Election. Kramer Group. These are young men employed by powerful, criminal networks. Getty Images. The Port of Rotterdam, the largest seaport in Europe, is a gateway for cocaine smuggling. A group of men aged between 18 and 23 were rescued from inside a sea container by emergency services in September. Trading sex for cosmetic surgery in Mexico's narco capital Trafficked to Europe for sex: A survivor's escape story The hard men removing squatters in Spain. Rotterdam's chief prosecutor is familiar with these stories. Shipping containers. Shipping industry. Drugs trade. Long Reads.
Now local people say the drug, which can be bought for less than a small bar of chocolate, has spread across the country. Luji Guastamacchia, a.
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The river port of Rosario lies on the route between cocaine-producing Peru and Bolivia and lucrative markets in Europe. The result is terrifying violence and addiction. On his way home from a birthday party, the year-old stopped to buy juice from a small store in the Los Pumitas district of Rosario, Argentina , unaware that narcos embroiled in a turf war were also on their way. One was shot in the face, a toddler in the shoulder. Rosario, an inland river port city, has been ensnared by gang violence for decades. The difficulties of crossing the ocean seem to have disappeared. As the year-old musician left rehearsals in the leafy city centre in February , two men dragged him by his hair into a waiting car. A note was left inside his pocket, with a warning to a rival cartel. This March four more murders rattled the city, when gangs targeted innocent workers in retaliation for a proposed crackdown on prisoners. The victims included a petrol station worker and father, Bruno Bussanich, 25, who was shot three times at close range. Near his body a note addressed officials. In , even the in-laws of the footballer Lionel Messi, who own a supermarket in the city, were targeted. Now the boys say that working is stupid, that workers are poor all their lives, that the only future is being in a gang. Lots of students have dropped out. Neighbourhoods across the country have become inundated with narcotics, prosecutors say. According to UNODC data, Argentina ranks 14th in prevalence of cocaine use globally, and experts warn much of what is consumed is of low quality. In one toxic batch of cocaine killed at least 20 people and left 74 people in hospital. Much of the local trade focuses on paco , or coca paste, a toxic and highly addictive mixture of raw cocaine base cut with chemicals, which can even contain glue, crushed glass or rat poison. The drug — essentially a waste product of cocaine bound for export — is the third-most consumed illegal substance in the country. Paco is rumoured to have first emerged in Zavaleta, a slum in the capital, in the early s. Now local people say the drug, which can be bought for less than a small bar of chocolate, has spread across the country. Between and , the number of urban-dwelling Argentines aged consuming illicit drugs more than doubled, from 3. The recent increase is fuelled by poverty, he says. The security minister, Patricia Bullrich, has also announced a new anti-drug trafficking unit. But human rights activists and prosecutors warn that such tactics fail to tackle the problem. Prosecutor Schiappa Pietra says police corruption is rife. Photograph: Rodrigo Abd. This article is more than 4 months old. The result is terrifying violence and addiction Read more in this series. View image in fullscreen. Read more. Reuse this content. Most viewed.
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