Global organized crime becoming new superpower -UN

UNITED NATIONS, (Reuters) – Governments must smash  markets supplied by the global “superpower” of organized  criminals trafficking drugs, people, arms and counterfeit  goods, the U.N. crime chief said yesterday.

Criminals are reaping profits in the tens of billions of  dollars, Antonio Maria Costa, head of the U.N. Office on Drugs  and Crime, told Reuters about a report released by his agency.

But countries are not cooperating enough with each other  and the United Nations, and are too focused on traffickers.

“We have to start addressing the markets, which are  gigantic in size,” Costa said, adding that criminals who supply  those markets have transformed themselves into a well armed,  transnational “superpower.”

The report, called “The Globalization of Crime,” says the  trafficking of humans for sexual exploitation in Europe  generates $3 billion annually, while the smuggling of migrant  workers to the United States and Europe yields nearly $7  billion each year.

Europe’s heroin market accounts for $20 billion, the UNODC  said, while counterfeit goods detected on Europe’s borders have  an annual value over $10 billion.

“Arresting some traffickers may divert the flows, but it  will not shut them off,” Costa said in the written text of  remarks prepared for delivery to the General Assembly.

“Other criminals will fill the void as long as there is  money to be made. Therefore, in order to fight more effectively  organized crime, we must shift focus from disrupting the mafias  to disrupting their markets.”

Costa called for countries to step up action in rooting out  corruption in governments and in the private sector worldwide  that allows organized crime to thrive.

“We must also crack down on the accomplices of crime, like  the army of white-collar criminals — lawyers, accountants,  realtors and bankers — who cover them up and launder their  proceeds,” Costa said. “I especially urge you to strengthen  anti-money laundering and anti-corruption measures.”

He chastised U.N. member states for their “benign neglect”  of the U.N. Convention against Transnational Organized Crime,  signed 10 years ago in Palermo, Italy.

“As a result (of that neglect), crime has internationalized  faster than law enforcement and world governance,” he said.

The report says that “national responses are inadequate  (as) they displace the problem from one country.”

“The threat is not just economic,” Costa said. “It is  strategic, as criminals today can influence elections,  politicians and the military. In one word, they can gain  power.”

The problem is not limited to developing nations. Wealthy  countries, including the Group of Eight (G8) club of rich  nations, are also hit by organized crime.

“If you look at illicit flows, they almost all head north,”  he said. “The world’s biggest economies, namely the G8 and the  BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China), are the  biggest markets for illicit trade.”