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The Cocaine Coast

By Waldo Jaquith

January 28th, 2010

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A man stands in front of a Hummer, posing as if for the cover of a rap album. He is photographed from the chest down to the knees. His button-down shirt is open in the front, revealing high-riding boxers and a handgun stuffed into the waist of his stylish jeans. The grill of his vehicle is polished to a high shine.

See if you can follow the web of corruption that Marco Vernaschi outlines in “The Cocaine Coast”:

According to reports from Interpol and United Nations agencies, cocaine traded through West Africa accounts for a considerable portion of the income of Hezbollah. These reports say Hezbollah uses the Lebanese Shiite expatriate population in South America and West Africa to guarantee an efficient connection between the two continents. To maintain and expand its influence on the Shiite community, however, Hezbollah needs money. The estimated $120 million given annually by Iran is just a slice of the pie. Most of Hezbollah’s support comes from drug trafficking, a major moneymaker endorsed by the mullahs through a particular fatwa. In addition to the production and trade of heroin in the Middle East, Hezbollah facilitates, for a fee, the trafficking for other drug-smuggling networks, such as the FARC and its cocaine trade.

Vernaschi’s photos are just stunning, too—it’s worth checking out the article just for the pictures.

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