U.S. Department of State
1997 International Narcotics Control Strategy Report, March 1998
United States Department of State
Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs
Europe and Central Asia
PORTUGAL
I. Summary
Consumption and drug trafficking are significant problems in Portugal;
production/cultivation and money laundering are not. Heroin remains the
most troubling drug, and the number of AIDS cases increased over last
year. Seizures of ecstasy have increased more than tenfold. Consumption of
drugs overall appears stable compared to 1996, except for hashish, which
increased significantly. The way drugs enter Portugal has changed over the
past five years, with The Netherlands replacing Africa as the main
immediate source of narcotics.
The Government of Portugal (GOP) organizes its war on drugs along two
fronts, criminal and social, each with an umbrella agency which coordinates
the efforts within its domain. The umbrella organizations are the
Portuguese Judicial Police and Projecto Vida. Drug users are rarely
incarcerated, and Portuguese law treats addiction as an illness rather than
a crime.
II. Status of Country
Portugal's significance in the international drug trade stems from its
location as a transit point to the rest of Europe for heroin and cocaine
trafficking due to the relative ease with which smugglers can take
advantage of its long, rugged coastline and shortage of trained law
enforcement personnel. Open borders with other western European countries
facilitate the trafficking of heroin transiting from Holland and Spain and
cocaine from Brazil. In January 1997, the Dutch Navy found narcotics buried
in shallow (25 meters) Atlantic reefs about 150 miles southwest of
Lisbon. The discovery was accidental--the Navy ship observed a small boat
speeding away from the reef and searched the bottom with a minesweeper.
III. Country Actions Against Drugs in 1997
Policy Initiatives. Portuguese President Jorge Sampaio has announced
that he will attend the UN General Assembly Special Session on Drugs in
June 1998. At the November 1997 Ibero-America Summit in Venezuela,
President Sampaio was successful in getting a commitment from several other
countries to hold a drug summit some time next year. In January 1997, the
office of the President held a seminar entitled "Drugs: The Current
Situation and New Strategies," which was attended by representatives from
all 15 EU states.
A cabinet-level ministry, the Ministry of Youth, Sports, and Drug
Addiction, is headed by Jose Socrates, a recent appointee. Prime Minister
Guterres speaks publicly and frequently about the drug problem, and takes
the opportunity to address the issue at official openings of youth centers
and athletic fields. The GOP shares counternarcotics information with the
EU agency responsible for this task, the European Monitoring Centre for
Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA). The Ministry of Justice shares
information and offers training to their counterparts in lusophone
Africa. There is close cooperation with Brazil in narcotrafficking
matters.
Accomplishments. Recent clinical statistics show that heroin use,
by far the most serious drug problem in Portugal, is holding steady when
compared to 1996, neither decreasing nor increasing to any significant
degree.
Criminal statistics indicate that cocaine seizures decreased by 46
percent from the first half of 1996. Marijuana and hashish seizures, on the
other hand, increased by over 300 percent when compared to the same period
in 1996.
Law Enforcement Efforts. The Portuguese Judicial Police (PJP) has
overall responsibility for coordinating counternarcotics efforts in
Portugal. The PJP, a bureau of the Ministry of Justice, has overall
responsibility for coordinating investigations of international drug
trafficking, including precursors, and for activities related to criminal
association and organized distribution nets. The PJP focus on major
traffickers/organizations. Every arrest for drugs, and every drug seizure,
including maritime seizures, made by any of the agencies discussed below,
must be reported to the PJP, who maintain central files and statistics
related to narcotics. These statistics are publicized throughout Portugal
and shared with the EU government in Brussels and the DEA in Madrid. The
PJP is currently pressing for liberalized extradition laws, making it
easier to extradite foreign nationals found guilty of trafficking in
Portugal.
The Public Security Police (PSP) are the uniformed policemen who work
for the municipalities. They are responsible for activities related to
small trafficking/distribution to consumers and for consumption in public
places. The Republican National Guard (GNR) has the same responsibilities
as the PSP, but functions outside municipalities and along the
highways. The Bureau of Customs controls commodities and transportation by
sea or air.
Corruption. Corruption among law enforcement officials is not a
substantial problem in Portugal. There have been no cases of official
corruption reported during the past year.
Agreements and Treaties. As a party to the 1988 UN Drug
Convention, Portugal continues to support its goals and objectives. The USG
has concluded a Customs Mutual Assistance Agreement (CMAA) with the
Government of Portugal.
Portugal closely monitors the import of chemicals that could possibly be
used in drug manufacture. Importers must identify the end user of all
chemicals in order to prevent diversion. Enforcement cooperation remains
good, with Germany, the UK, and Sweden having drug liaison officers
resident in Portugal.
Cultivation/Production. A small amount of marijuana is raised by
individuals in northern Portugal, but the amount is not
significant. However, the potential for growing cannabis in Portugal does
exist.
Drug Flow/Transit. According to PJP sources, the entry of drugs
into Portugal has changed completely during the past five years. Prior to
1992, hashish and opium were grown in Afghanistan, processed (opium into
heroin) in Pakistan, and delivered to people of Indian origin living in
Mozambique. From there, the drugs entered by boat or plane, accompanied by
the Portuguese-speaking Mozambicans who sold them to Portuguese
distributors and users.
Since 1992, opium cultivated in Afghanistan and hashish cultivated in
Morocco are transported overland to Turkey, then driven by Turks to Holland
in large, 16-wheel trucks. These lorries, ostensibly transporting Turkish
tobacco, are "sealed" before entering the first Schengen country and
inspected again only when they are offloaded. The smugglers offload in the
Netherlands, and addicts say Afghan and Moroccan heroin and hashish are
superior to the African imports, and cheaper, too. Cocaine is grown in
Colombia and enters Portugal via Brazil by boat or plane.
Demand Reduction. The umbrella organization charged with
responsibility for the reintegration of drug addicts, as well as for
prevention and public awareness, is Projecto Vida ("Life Project.") It is
responsible for mobilizing community action by supporting and coordinating
NGO's and governmental agencies at all levels.
Portuguese law encourages treatment rather than penal censure and
foresees a diverse range of possibilities, whose final goal is to give the
drug addict a chance to undergo treatment and give up consumption. Created
in 1987 by the national government, the Life Project's High Commission
(essentially a bureau in the Ministry of Health) oversees and directs the
activities involved in the social aspects of the drug problem. The
organization is funded largely by the national lottery, but also receives
funding from three other Ministeries--Education, Labor and Social
Security. Several large NGO's receive Projecto Vida funding and sit on the
board of directors. The Labor Ministry is represented and tries to find
employment for recovering addicts. Even the Defense Ministry is involved,
offering psychiatric help and rehabilitation to members of the Armed Forces
(including treatment for alcoholism.) The NGO's of Projecto Vida are
principally volunteer groups made up of former addicts; about one-third of
them are affiliated with religious organizations.
Projecto Vida's chairman was a highly respected Roman Catholic Priest,
Feytor Pinto, known to all Portuguese as Padre Feytor. The Life Project has
drug clinics in every city in Portugal and many small towns, as well. These
clinics, called "Cats" (Centros de Apoio a Toxicodependentes) are free of
charge and offer health services, psychiatric counseling, a methadone
program and detoxification services to addicts. 80 percent of the clients
are male, with an average age of 27.4 years.
A new cabinet-level ministry has been named to combat the problem of
drug addicition, an indication of governmental concern and effort.The Roman
Catholic priest, Feytor Pinto, resigned in December, 1997 citing his belief
that the Life Project should be administered by a civil servant, not a
cleric, now that there is a ministry charged with the issue of drug
addiction.
In an effort to control AIDS and hepatitis, the Life Project administers
a program called "say no to second-hand needles." It offers free needle
exchange at over 2,500 pharmacies throughout Portugal. Projecto Vida
conducts classes about drugs at all levels of public schools and in adult
education programs. It is the primary organization in Portugal charged with
drug awareness. The project offers training to health professionals and
school teachers.
The Life Project also studies use patterns among the population. They
have made two large, nation-wide studies, in 1989 and 1995, which show that
Portuguese do not begin using drugs early in life. However, Portuguese
school children in grades seven through nine have a high rate of tobacco
use (37 percent) and alcohol use (58 percent.)
IV. US Policy Initiatives and Programs
Policy Initiatives. The Drug Enforcement Administration maintains an
office at Embassy Madrid with regional responsibilities for Portugal. In
October of this year, DEA and the EU co-sponsored a conference on
multilateral chemical reporting, held in Lisbon and attended by 12 of the
15 EU member states.
Bilateral and Multilateral Cooperation. On September 3, 1997,
Portugal made substantial revisions to the constitution concerning
extradition. One major change is that Portugal will now extradite its own
citizens for crimes of terrorism and organized crime where there is
reciprocity established by international conventions and the requesting
state guarantees a fair and equitable process. Extradition continues to be
forbidden for political offenses or for crimes which could carry the death
penalty in the requesting state. However, the constitution now authorizes
extradition for crimes punishable by life imprisonment, if the requesting
state offers assurances that a sentence of life imprisonment will not be
imposed or carried out.
In 1998, the United States will propose renegotiation of the 1908
Extradition Treaty between the US and Portugal in an effort to ensure that
drug offenses are covered and to incorporate changes that will comply with
the new requirements of the Portuguese Constitution.
At a legal seminar on November 21, 1997, Minister of Justice Vera Jardim
said that Portugal had been under considerable pressure to modify the
Article on Extradition in the constitution by other countries in the
European Union.
The Road Ahead. There is every indication that Portugal will
continue and even increase its counternarcotics efforts, both on the
criminal and civil fronts.
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