How the tentacles of drug trafficking infiltrate the country in the heart of the European Union

Customs officers search a drug container on July 11, 2023 in the port of Antwerp, Belgium. More and more cocaine from South America arrives at this Belgian port.

Image source, Getty Images

photo caption, Customs officers search a drug container on July 11, 2023 in the port of Antwerp, Belgium. More and more cocaine from South America arrives at this Belgian port.

At the end of October, a Belgian investigative judge caused an uproar when she published an open letter asking her country’s government for “urgent” assistance.

The official claimed that drug trafficking was turning Belgium into a drug state, and warned that the rule of law was threatened in this country located in the heart of Europe and whose capital is also the capital of the European Union.

“Have we become a drug state? Exaggerated? According to our Narcotics Commissioner, this development has already begun,” charged the judge from Antwerp, a city whose port has become one of the main entry points for cocaine into Europe.

The investigating judge described drug trafficking as “an organized threat that undermines institutions.”

He added, “The large mafia structures have been strengthened, which has become a parallel force that challenges not only the police, but also the judiciary.”