Decision 505
Andean Cooperation Plan for the Control of
Illegal Drugs and Related Offenses
THE ANDEAN COUNCIL OF FOREIGN MINISTERS,
HAVING SEEN: Article 16 of
the Cartagena Agreement and Decision 458 "Common
Foreign Policy Guidelines";
BEARING IN MIND: The
agreement approved by the Presidents of the
Andean Countries at the meeting held on April
17, 2001 in Cartagena, Colombia;
WHEREAS: Illegal drug
production, traffic, and consumption, asset
laundering, diversion and smuggling of
chemical precursors, and arms trafficking
seriously threaten the development and
security of the Andean countries;
The efforts being made
today by the Andean countries under their
respective national programs for the control
of illegal drugs and related offenses can be
significantly boosted and supplemented through
an Andean Cooperation Plan to intensify
national, bilateral, and Community measures in
this area;
The international community
can wage an integrated campaign against the
worldwide illegal drug problem that could
cover all of the aspects involved in illegal
drug production, traffic, and consumption and
related offenses, based on the principle of
shared responsibility;
The Andean strategy for the
control of illegal drugs and related offenses,
as well as international efforts in this area,
should be carried out with full respect for
national law and sovereignty.
DECIDES:
Sole article. – To approve
the Andean Cooperation Plan for the Control of
Illegal Drugs and Related Offenses set out in
the document attached to this Decision.
Signed in the city of
Valencia, Venezuela, on the twenty-second of
June of two thousand and one.
ANDEAN COOPERATION PLAN
FOR THE CONTROL OF ILLEGAL DRUGS AND RELATED
OFFENSES
Principles and
Objectives
The Andean Cooperation Plan
for the Control of Illegal Drugs and Related
Offenses:
1. Is grounded in the
conviction that illegal drug production,
trafficking, and consumption is a worldwide
problem that seriously threatens the
development and security of the Andean
countries and of the international community.
Recognizes that this is one of the most
harmful and dangerous forms of organized
transnational crime, that makes use of the
globalizing logic of the markets, disrupts the
social dynamic, distorts the economy,
undermines the state of law, and subverts the
public order.
2. Is comprehensive and
encompasses all of the aspects of the
worldwide drug problem and related offenses:
prevention, interdiction, reduction of illicit
crops, and alternative development, as well as
the control of the diversion of chemical
precursors, asset laundering, and the traffic
in arms, ammunition, and explosives.
3. In this connection, it
is based on the shared responsibility of each
and every one of the actors involved in
creating the problem and, as a result, in the
search for solutions to it at both the Andean
Subregional level and the South American,
hemispheric, and world levels.
4. Is respectful of
national legislation and territorial
sovereignty and integrity, as well as of the
strict observance of International Law and is
implemented through cooperation and solidarity.
That cooperation is inherent to the shared
nature of the problem and, consequently,
should be mutual, voluntary and not subject to
limitations or requirements that set
conditions on the unhampered involvement of
the wills of the parties. The solidarity, for
its part, is an expression of the recognition
that national and Subregional drug control
efforts should be accompanied by international
cooperation in order to reinforce democracy
and the exercise of human rights and at the
same time promote the sustainable economic and
social development of the Andean Countries.
5. Seeks to strengthen and
step up national programs in each of the
Andean Countries through coordination,
cooperation, and the exchange of experiences
among the Member Countries and by taking joint
action in dealing with third countries and in
international forums.
6. Is a key issue of Andean
political cooperation that links up the common
foreign policy, Community border integration
and development policy, sustainable
development policy, the Andean Social Agenda,
and security and confidence-building efforts
in the Subregion, as applicable.
7. It is proposed that the
Andean Community be consolidated as the moving
force for a South American and hemispheric
strategy for the control of illegal drugs and
related offenses.
Mechanisms
1. The Andean Council of
Foreign Ministers is the body responsible for
defining, coordinating, and following up the
Andean Cooperation Plan for the Control of
Illegal Drugs and Related Offenses.
2. An Executive Committee
will be set up, formed of high-level officials
of the Ministries of Foreign Affairs and the
national officers responsible for controlling
illegal drugs and related offenses, including
representatives of the security bodies.
3. The Executive Committee
may establish subcommittees and working groups
specializing in the different aspects of the
Andean Plan. The Subcommittees and working
groups may be made up of two or more Member
Countries and will be open to the
participation of the others.
4. The Andean Community
General Secretariat will act as the Executive
Committee’s Technical Secretariat.
Program of Action
1. The Program of Action
will be approved by decision of the Andean
Council of Foreign Ministers and will cover a
two-year period.
2. The Executive Committee
will draw up the Operating Plans for carrying
out the Program of Action and every two years
will propose the updating of that program to
the Andean Council of Foreign Ministers.
3. It will be the Executive
Committee’s responsibility to coordinate,
oversee, and evaluate the Program of Action,
with the assistance of the General Secretariat.
PROGRAM OF ACTION
I. REINFORCEMENT OF
NATIONAL STRATEGIES
A. Control of the
production, smuggling, and diversion of
chemical precursors
1. Implement the mechanism
for reporting the export of controlled
chemical substances prior to their shipment
and the timely answers from the intended
country of destination, pursuant to article 12
of the 1988 Vienna Convention.
2. Reinforce the monitoring
of enterprises that produce, use, and/or sell
controlled chemical substances in order to
avoid their diversion for the production of
illegal drugs.
3. Strengthen the
mechanisms for detecting controlled chemical
substances and train the pertinent officials
to identify those substances.
4. Make the measures for
controlling the illegal production and
smuggling of controlled chemical substances
stronger.
5. Set up and/or reinforce
the mechanisms for controlling the transport
and diversion of chemical substances in the
national territory through the following,
among other things:
a) The use of customs
documents containing the generic name and
corresponding tariff code for trade in the
controlled chemical substances.
b) The establishment of a
system of labeling and safety sealing that
would make it difficult to divert packaged
or bottled products by replacing them.
6. Create and/or update the
national register of firms that import and
export controlled chemical substances. That
information will be made available to whoever
asks for it.
7. Identify the needs of
the legitimate industries dealing with
potassium permanganate, acetic anhydride, and
the substances included in the Andean
Community’s control operations.
8. Develop inter-sector
coordination for the purpose of identifying
new substances used in drug production for
possible inclusion on the list of controlled
substances following a study of their level of
use.
B. Technical eradication
of illegal crops
1. Build up national
capacities to implement programs for the
technical eradication of illegal crops by hand
or by air, in the countries that need it,
keeping in mind the environmental standards
established by the competent authorities.
2. Identify illegal crop
growing areas, their size, evolution, features,
zones of influence, and any other relevant
information.
3. Contribute to the
coordination between the authorities
responsible for execution of the eradication
programs and those in charge of the
alternative development programs.
4. Promote the
establishment of agreements between local
communities and public authorities as a means
of reducing crops grown for illegal purposes
and introducing alternative products.
C. Alternative
Development.
1. Create the necessary
economic, social, and cultural conditions to
make it feasible to replace the illegal crop
production-based economy and to bring farmers
into the legal economy.
2. Identify and establish
the characteristics of the populations of the
illegal crop growing areas and their zones of
influence.
3. Design and put into use
financial, economic, and technological
instruments for supporting national
alternative development programs, including
private investment promotion, market opening,
and the incorporation into alternative
production of products with a larger value
added.
4. Boost the strengthening
of grass-roots organizations and give them
support through consciousness-raising,
training, and communication processes.
5. Step up the national
capacity to offer basic social services and
develop the economic infrastructure in the
illegal crop growing areas and their zones of
influence.
6. Design and implement
social communication strategies to discourage
the involvement of farm and native families
with illegal crops and promote alternative
crops.
D. Dismantling of the
production and transport infrastructure and
organizations
1. Reinforce the mechanisms
for coordination among the police and military
forces and state security bodies, the Public
Ministry and/or the Attorney General’s Office,
and the Judiciary.
2. Build up the capacity
for action of the intelligence units
specialized in the control of drug trafficking
and ensure the timely exchange of information
among the various competent national
authorities.
3. Increase the human,
material, financial, and technological
resources allocated to the specialized units
responsible for controlling drug trafficking
organizations.
4. Strengthen the
mechanisms for detecting illegal drug
production laboratories and hidden airstrips.
5. Buttress the system for
controlling illegal drug trafficking by sea,
river, air, and land.
6. Create and/or reinforce
the control mechanisms in order to impede
illegal trafficking in arms, ammunition,
explosives, and other similar materials.
E. Asset laundering
1. Establish and/or build
up the national intelligence and financial
analysis units.
2. Identify the existing
types or methods of asset laundering and
create the corresponding control mechanisms.
3. Train specialized
personnel in the agencies responsible for
detecting and controlling asset laundering
operations.
4. Investigate the sectors
capable of use for activities connected with
asset laundering and link them up with the
intelligence and financial analysis units.
5. Design and implement
mechanisms for administrative control of
international currency transactions.
6. Criminalize asset
laundering as an autonomous offense, so that
it will encompass other criminal behavior (vehicle
theft, extortion, kidnapping, white slavery,
trafficking in human organs, and arms
trafficking).
7. Strengthen the
application of provisions on the seizure of
goods procured as a result of drug trafficking
or related offenses.
8. Establish regulations on
the prevention of asset laundering in free
trade areas and at free ports.
F. Reduction of the
demand
1. Put a stop to the rising
trend in illegal drug consumption, especially
among children and young people, with
schooling or not, through programs targeting
the family, community, and school.
2. Develop a mass media
strategy to inform, sensitize, and educate
young people about the consequences of drug
consumption, giving special emphasis to the
synthetic or designer drugs that have recently
appeared on the scene.
3. Incorporate more
information about prevention in the
curriculums at the different educational
levels and educate parents and educational
agents in the new trends in illegal drug
consumption.
4. Promote programs for the
rehabilitation and social reinsertion of drug-dependent
individuals.
5. Implement mechanisms for
overseeing and evaluating programs to cut down
the demand for drugs.
6. Design and launch
programs to give human resources preparation
and training in prevention and rehabilitation.
7. Boost and support the
participation of civil organizations in
prevention and rehabilitation activities.
II. REINFORCEMENT OF
BINATIONAL STRATEGIES
1. Evaluate the existing
bilateral drug control agreements, update and
perfect them, and put them into force.
2. Promote and strengthen
bilateral mechanisms, such as the mixed
commissions, border workshops, and
neighborhood committees, in order to draw up
border action plans for:
a. Controlling the
traffic in drugs and controlled chemical
substances.
b. Giving border authorities training in
subjects connected with drug control.
c. Carrying out combined interdiction
operations.
d. Stepping-up the exchange of information
and coordination of logistics among border
authorities.
e. Controlling the illegal traffic in
firearms, ammunition, and other similar
materials.
3. Incorporate alternative
development projects in the Border Integration
Zones and include them in the Project Bank to
be set up as part of the Andean Integration
and Development Policy.
4. Institute effective
mechanisms to control trafficking in illegal
drugs, controlled chemical substances, arms,
ammunition, and other related materials,
through the National and Binational Border
Service Centers (NBSC and BBSC).
5. Periodically examine and
evaluate the execution and efficiency of the
binational cooperation measures that are
carried out under this Andean Cooperation
Plan.
III. COMMUNITY STRATEGY
1. Establish an Andean
mechanism for exchanging information through
the Andean Community website about the methods
of trafficking in and diversion of controlled
chemical substances, use of new substances,
successful control operations, updated
national registers of enterprises that import
and export controlled chemical substances, and
changes in the importance and use of border
crossings for the illegal trafficking in those
substances, and promote the use of other
national, regional and international
computerized systems, such as Unidos contra
Drogas (UCD) and the Venezuelan, inter-American,
and European drug observatories.
2. Step up the exchange of
intelligence among the competent authorities
of the Andean countries, among others, making
more use of existing communication mechanisms,
such as the Regional Liaison Offices of the
World Customs Organization (RILO) and the
Inter-American Telecommunications Network for
Drug Control (RETCOD), in order to back
regional efforts to control drugs, related
offenses, and the arms traffic.
3. Establish closer
coordination among the national authorities
responsible for drug control in the Member
Countries, among others, by appointing
national liaison officers in the respective
institutions and assigning new duties to the
police and military attachés’ offices, as
applicable, to support this Andean Cooperation
Plan.
4. Promote the training in
common of national drug control officials
through, among others, the Andean Community’s
Regional Antidrug Intelligence School (ERCAIAD),
ensuring its appropriate funding and adjusting
its curriculum to the priorities of the Andean
Strategy, and supporting the establishment and
activation of the Andean Anti-drug Canine
Training School.
5. Contribute to the
signing of legal assistance agreements on
criminal matters and step up the execution of
existing agreements, including procedures for
the extradition of defendants accused of drug
trafficking or related offenses under the
existing accords.
6. In each Member Country,
appoint as liaison officers investigating
judges who are empowered to answer requests
for reciprocal legal assistance in drug
trafficking cases or to remit them to the
competent authorities for compliance.
7. Contribute to
harmonizing national criminal and procedural
legislation through periodic meetings of the
Ministers of Justice of the Andean Community,
bearing in mind the work that is being done
under the aegis of the mechanism between the
European Union and the Andean Community on
coordination and cooperation in drug matters.
8. Promote the exchange of
experiences and undertake joint actions to
back alternative development programs,
incorporating for that purpose the Andean
Committee for Alternative Development (CADA)
as the Andean Cooperation Plan’s specialized
body on the subject and supporting its efforts.
9. Reinforce cooperation in
order to prevent and control asset laundering
at the Andean level through the exchange of
experiences and interlinkage of the Financial
Intelligence Analysis Units of the countries
in the Subregion and other competent bodies.
10. Implement the
guidelines established by the Inter-American
System of Standardized Drug Consumption Data (SIDUC)
and entrust the analysis to the Hipólito
Unanue Convention (CONHU), so that the Andean
Community can have data on which it can draw
to prepare prevention strategies that are
attuned to its situation.
11. Develop a joint
strategy for preventing drug consumption and
production and controlling synthetic and
designer drugs.
12. Identify the
international technical cooperation
requirements and capacities and establish a
mechanism for horizontal cooperation among the
Member Countries.
13. Design and carry out
joint strategies for mobilizing international
technical and financial cooperation to support
the measures provided for in the Andean
Strategy for the control of drugs and related
offenses, as well as debt-for-alternative
development program support swaps.
14. Apply for the renewal
and expansion of the programs of trade
preferences in support of drug control that
benefit the Member Countries and obtain
conditions for preferential access to other
markets and the removal of restrictions on
their full use.
15. Promote the
mobilization of international cooperation for
programs to prevent and alleviate the
environmental impact of the illegal drug
problem, including the recovery of ecosystems
and conservation of the biodiversity.
16. Further international
cooperation, in particular through the
organization of donor groups in order to boost
alternative development, create jobs in
production, and alleviate poverty in illegal
drug crop growing areas, in areas from which
labor is migrating, and in areas that are
highly prone to use for drug cultivation.
17. Coordinate joint drug
control positions in dealing with third
countries and in international forums and
organizations as part of the Andean Common
Foreign Policy.
18. Update the "Rodrigo
Lara Bonilla" Convention on cooperation for
preventing drug abuse and for suppressing the
illegal traffic in narcotic drugs and
psychotropic substances, in order to adjust it
to the needs created by this Andean
Cooperation Plan.
19. Examine and evaluate,
as a Community, the implementation and
effectiveness of the measures that are carried
out under this Andean Cooperation Plan.