Afleveringen

  • Buenaventura – “The Pact for Life”

    Buenaventura has long been an important node in international illicit markets, particularly cocaine trafficking due to its port. Gangs, paramilitaries and organized criminal networks have all looked to gain a foothold here. The resulting violence has meant the city has seen many murders, and even more disappearances, with terrifying tales emanating from the so-called 'Casa de pique’ (Chop Shops).

    In September 2022, two gangs in Buenaventura, on the Pacific coast of Colombia, signed a truce to end the bloodshed that had gripped the city for two years - called 'The Pact for Life', which was mediated by the Bishop of Buenaventura.

    Los Shottas and Los Espartanos (the Spartans) had been locked in a vicious battle ever since they had both broken away from the La Local gang, carving up the city between them.

    The administration of President Gustavo Petro, saw the truce as an opportunity to negotiate with these two gangs under the Total Peace policy, which looks to reduce violence in communities across Colombia.

    There has been a reduction in homicides, but this stat hides the fact that other crimes have increased - extortion, disappearances, control of movement, and the "justice" (fines, beatings or murder) meted out on the population by the gangs.

    Speaker(s):

    Mariana Botero Restrepo, former GITOC Analyst and Researcher in the Observatory of the Andean Region.

    Felipe Botero Escobar, Head of Andean Regional Office, Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime

    Juanita Durán-Vélez, Lawyer, Crime and Justice Lab, Colombia.

    Links:

    Andean Regional Office, Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime

    Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime

    Podcast & Article - Clan del Golfo: The fall of 'Otoniel': How Colombia's biggest drug lord was taken down.

    The base research (Negotiating with Criminal Groups: Colombia´s Total Peace Policy) for this episode was initially developed and supported by Serious Organized Crime and Anticorruption Evidence research program.

    Additional...

  • Colombia is a country that has been racked by conflict for around 60 years - multiple armed groups and organized crime have waged war against each other and the state.

    In 2016, after nearly seven years of negotiations, the FARC demobilized, creating a power vacuum that other groups, such as the National Liberation Army (ELN), Clan del Golfo, and FARC dissidents, quickly filled. Despite the FARC's exit, violence persisted, with cocaine production and illegal mining continuing unabated, leaving many communities under the control of criminal organizations.

    In 2022, the President of Colombia Gustavo Petro brought forward new legislation, known as 'Total Peace'. This ambitious and wide ranging policy looks to negotiate with all criminal groups, whether they are politically minded, like the FARC were or organized crime. Why? To help reduce violence, in particularly homicides, but also to try a new approach to end these long-running conflicts.

    One of the key players in these negotiations was the ELN, the oldest guerrilla group in the world. The Petro administration expressed optimism, claiming a peace agreement could be reached within three months of taking office. However, over two years later, those talks have stalled and ultimately collapsed, raising questions about the future of peace efforts in Colombia.

    Speaker(s):

    Juanita Durán-Vélez, Lawyer, Crime and Justice Lab, Colombia.

    Kyle Johnson, Researcher & Academic Director of the Conflict Responses Foundation, Bogotá, Colombia

    Felipe Botero Escobar, Head of Andean Regional Office, Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime

    Links:

    Andean Regional Office, Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime

    Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime

    Podcast & Article - Clan del Golfo: The fall of 'Otoniel': How Colombia's biggest drug lord was taken down.

    The base research (Negotiating with Criminal Groups: Colombia´s Total Peace Policy) for this episode was initially developed and supported by Serious Organized Crime and Anticorruption Evidence research program.

    Additional...

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  • In May 2024, a prison van was attacked at a highway toll in Normandy, France. In dramatic footage shared on social media, a black SUV, driving the wrong direction, rammed into the prison van just as it went through the barriers. Then gunmen, dressed head-to-toe in black and armed with Kalashnikov rifles got out and started shooting at the van, killing two prison officers.

    They opened the van and freed the prisoner, a man named Mohamed Amra, aka "The Fly", who escaped with the gunmen. There is now an Interpol Red Notice out for Amra.

    The attack took place in broad daylight and sheds light on the dramatic increase in gang violence over the last few years in France. Mohamed Amra had connections to the city that has been at the forefront of this violence, Marseille, on the Mediterranean coast.

    Speaker(s):

    Iris Oustinoff Leroux, YPN Coordinator and Analyst, Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime

    Links:

    (GI article) France in the crossfire: Prisoner escapes in Normandy amid rise in organized crime

    (GI Paper) Smoke on the horizon: Trends in arms trafficking from the conflict in Ukraine

    (GI Article) The Western Balkans is still the criminals’ choice for weapons.

    Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime

    Global Organized Crime Index

    Senate Report FAIT au nom de la commission d’enquête (1) sur l’impact du narcotrafic en France et les mesures à prendre pour y remédier,

    Additional...

  • On the 1st May 2024, 711 migrants successfully crossed the Channel between France and the UK in small boats. This year is so far on track to see the highest number of crossings on record.

    This highly industrialised illicit industry estimated to be worth hundreds of millions of Euros, has seen the coast of northern France demarcated between competing gangs from a specific region of the Middle East, and who have a long history of smuggling.

    They control the entire length of the route, from beginning to end - targeting prospective migrants through social media, offering package deals, and advice on how to speak to authorities on arrival. Some migrants even use their own knowledge of the trip to become smugglers themselves.

    In this episode we take a look at the criminal groups behind the small boat crossings; how organised the logistics are; how much money they make and where it goes; and finally what this could mean for the future of other illicit economies in Western Europe.

    Speaker(s):

    Tuesday Reitano, Deputy Director of the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime, author of the book Migrant, Refugee, Smuggler, Saviour. Author of the report Small Boats, Big Business: The Industrialization of Cross-Channel Migrant Smuggling.

    Julien Goudichaud, documentary filmmaker who has been reporting on people smugglers who operate in Calais.

    Afshin Ismaeli, a journalist and war photographer from Norway.

    Links:

    (GI Paper) Small Boats, Big Business: The Industrialization of Cross-Channel Migrant Smuggling - available in English & French

    (Book) Migrant, Refugee, Smuggler, Saviour

    (GI Paper) The Human Conveyor Belt: Trends in human trafficking and smuggling in post-revolution Libya

    (GI Analysis) An increasing number of Albanians are crossing the English Channel from France using small boats

    (GI Analysis) Western Balkan criminal groups are important players in the Netherlands

    Additional...

  • LockBit, the world's largest ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) provider suffered a very public takedown by an international law enforcement task force, Operation Cronos.

    The ransomware behemoth quickly relaunched just days later. But in a world where trust is key, might the reputational damage be too great?

    This is the story of the rise of LockBit, its relationship with other infamous cybercriminal groups, its uneasy relationship with some affiliates, its curious leader LockBitsupp, the public takedown and the relaunch, and what this means for the future of ransomware-as-a-service.

    Speaker(s):

    Koryak Uzan, Co-founder & Managing Director of PRODAFT

    Links:

    GITOC - The Rise and Fall of the Conti ransomware group

    PRODAFT - LockBit: Behind the Lines of the Notorious RaaS

    PRODAFT - The Demise of LOCKBIT: Disrupting the Most Prominent Ransomware Gang by Utilizing Upstream Threat...

  • Russian organized crime has a mythology attached to it - the brutal tattooed men of the Vory v Zakone. But those days are long in the past, rapid globalisation saw a new type of organized criminal take the reins in the Russian underworld, spreading their influence as criminal facilitators across the world.

    But the war in Ukraine has changed that. It's changed the relationship between organized crime and the Russian state, the status quo within the established criminal order, the potential vacuum left by those criminals who fight and die in the conflict, the establishment of Russian criminal groups outside of the country, the flows of illicit goods themselves have evolved, and then Ukraine, once so critical to those illicit flows, is currently lost.

    Such is the uncertainty surrounding organized crime that there have been rumblings about a possible return to a dark period in Russian history, known as the 'Wild 90s' - a period of anarchy that is etched into the Russian psyche.

    Speaker(s):

    Mark Galeotti, the Executive Director of Mayak Intelligence, honorary professor at University College London, member of the GI Network. Author of ‘The Vory: Russia’s Super Mafia' and the GI-TOC paper: Time of Troubles: The Russian underworld since the Ukraine invasion

    Links:

    (GI Paper) Rebellion as racket: Crime and the Donbas conflict 2014-2022

    (GI Paper) Evolving drug trends in wartime Ukraine

    (GI Analysis) The devil’s not-so-new psychoactive substance: Alpha-PVP, a highly addictive synthetic drug, is experiencing growing demand in Ukraine.

    (GI Paper) Crossroads: Kazakhstan's changing illicit drug economy

    (GI Paper) Port in a storm: Organized crime in Odesa since the Russian invasion

    (Podcast) “Death Can Wait”: Drugs on the Frontline in Ukraine

    Research Links:

    https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2023/10/23/russian-artist-fined-for-extremist-toy-doll-with-prison-tattoos-a82852

    https://tass.ru/obschestvo/9218777

    https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2020/08/17/russia-outlaws-childrens-criminal-underground-movement-a71178

  • At the start of the year masked gunman burst into a television studio in Guayaquil, Ecuador. The cameras were live and the entire event was broadcast. The video shows gang members shouting at staff, pushing them to the ground, threatening them with guns and explosives. These pictures subsequently travelled around the world.

    But this event was just one in a series to hit Ecuador in a short space of time. Car bombs, kidnappings, murder, prison riots, prominent prisoner escapes, and another national state of emergency.

    Criminal violence has washed over the country as competing gangs like Los Choneros and Los Lobos battle in prisons and on the streets over control of the lucrative cocaine trafficking business. Foreign organized criminal actors like the Mexican Sinaloa and Jalisco New Generation Cartels, the Albanian Mafia, FARC dissident groups from Colombia, and others, are all active in Ecuador, a country described as a "cocaine superhighway".

    In the space of just five or so years, Ecuador has gone from one of the safest countries in Latin America to a country with one of the highest murder rates. In this episode we are going to talk about how this happened.

    Speaker(s):

    Felipe Botero Escobar, the Head of Andean Programmes at the Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime

    GI-TOC:

    (Paper) Organized crime declares war: The road to chaos in Ecuador

    (Blog) Fernando Villavicencio - Assassination Witness Project

    The Global Organized Crime Index - Ecuador Country Profile

    (Paper) Transnational Tentacles: Global Hotspots of Balkan Organized Crime

    (Podcast episode) The Index - Ecuador

    (Paper) The cocaine pipeline to Europe

    Additional...

  • 'The King is dead, long live the King!'

    In September 2023, Ovidio Guzmán López, the son of Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzmán, stood in a courtroom as a series of charges were laid out, including his alleged role as a leader of the Sinaloa Cartel.

    There is a long list of cartel and organized crime leaders over the past few decades who have been targeted through what become known as the 'Kingpin Strategy'. The strategy aims to weaken, destabilise, and destroy criminal groups through a variety of methods, but is not without critics.

    In this episode of Deep Dive: Monitoring, we look at the arrest of Ovidio, the history and impact of the Kingpin Strategy, how organized crime responds to a prominent criminal leader being removed, the so-called "Narco-Culture" that surrounds criminal actors, and the impact it has on the communities bearing the greatest impact of these criminal groups.

    Speaker:

    Siria Gastelum Felix, the Director of Resilience, Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime - Link

    GITOC:

    OC Index - Mexico

    OC Index - Colombia

    Clan del Golfo: The fall of 'Otoniel' - How Colombia's biggest drug lord was taken down.

    Mexico’s war with itself? ¿La guerra de México consigo mismo?

    Additional Reading:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cmlj7cFHlsA

    https://www.ojp.gov/ncjrs/virtual-library/abstracts/criminal-prosecution-drug-traffickers-under-continuing-criminal

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-66853111

    https://insightcrime.org/colombia-organized-crime-news/oficina-de-envigado-profile/

    https://insightcrime.org/colombia-organized-crime-news/auc-profile/

    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-66784678

    https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022/10/20/colombias-coca-crops-grew-to-historic-levels-last-year-un

    https://museum.dea.gov/video-archive/kingpin-strategy-did-it-work

    https://justiceinmexico.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/OCVM-21.pdf

    https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/VC.IHR.PSRC.P5?locations=CO&most_recent_value_desc=true

  • “If you can do it without consequences, then you should do it”.

    What are illicit Financial Flows, or IFFs? And why do they matter?

    Every illicit market, from drug trafficking, people smuggling, the illegal wildlife trade, arms trafficking etc. all are connected to IFFs. IFFs are about the movement of money across borders that is illegal in some way.

    The money could be from a criminal act, like corruption or its money associated with the illicit markets above. Perhaps, it could be legitimately earned money that is transferred in a way that evades taxation, like being paid in cash and not declaring it or money is funnelled into complex corporate schemes and secrecy jurisdictions. Or perhaps its ultimate use is something like terrorist financing or funding organised criminal activity.

    Dirty money is a global problem, according to the IMF, it makes up between 2-5% (up to $5.25 trillion dollars) of global GDP.

    Given the scale of the problem, in this episode we will focus in on the Western Balkans in South-Eastern Europe through three IFFs - money laundering investigations in Kosovo, corruption and the role of the private sector in Albania, and tax evasion in Bosnia & Herzegovina.

    Speaker(s):

    Dardan Kocani, Field Coordinator for Kosovo for the South Eastern Europe Observatory at the Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime

    Sokol Toska, Legal Auditor in Albania and expert in money laundering and illicit financial flows.

    Anesa Agovich, Field Coordinator for Bosnia and Herzegovina at the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime

    Links:

    Illicit financial flows in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro and Serbia: Key drivers and current trends

    Illicit Financial Flows in Albania, Kosovo and North Macedonia: Key drivers and current trends

    Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime

    Global Organized Crime Index

    Research Links:

     https://www.europol.europa.eu/cms/sites/default/files/documents/europol-review-2016.pdf

    https://www.visualcapitalist.com/visualizing-the-105-trillion-world-economy-in-one-chart/

    https://www.ibe.org.uk/resource/tax-avoidance-as-an-ethical-issue-for-business.html

    https://www.transparency.org/en/corruptionary/tax-evasion

    https://albaniandailynews.com/news/wanted-for-incinerators-affair-stela-gugallja-detained-in-austria...

  • In September 2023, there were four large cocaine seizures in and around the Atlantic Ocean - off the coast of Ireland, West Africa, Brazil, and Cape Verde.

    The flows of cocaine that traverse the Atlantic travel mainly by sea, from the huge bulk carriers to small fishing vessels or sailing boats. Much of this illicit drug ends in the cocaine markets of Europe.

    In this episode of Deep Dive: Monitoring, we briefly take a look at the seizures, what they mean for cocaine markets and the organized criminal networks involved. And do drug seizures make a dent in this multi-billion dollar industry?

    Speaker:

    Jason Eligh, Senior Expert, Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime and Thematic Lead of the GI-TOC's Global Drug Program - Link

    Papers:

    The cocaine pipeline to Europe

    Atlantic connections: The PCC and the Brazil-West Africa cocaine trade

    West Africa's Cocaine Corridor: Building a subregional response

    Cocaine politics in West Africa: Guinea-Bissau's protection networks

    A powder storm: The cocaine markets of East and southern Africa

    Additional Reading:

    https://www.donegaldaily.com/2023/10/03/gardai-believe-e157m-drugs-gang-tried-to-buy-boat-in-killybegs/

    https://www.sundayworld.com/crime/cocaine-bust-trawler-remains-wedged-on-sandbank-off-wexford-coast/a295844397.html

    https://www.irishexaminer.com/news/munster/arid-41235682.html

    https://www.marinetraffic.com/en/ais/details/ships/shipid:5058595/mmsi:250004351/imo:0/vessel:CASTLEMORE

    https://afloat.ie/safety/marine-warning/item/26428-marine-notice-aim-requirements-for-seagoing-passenger-ships

    https://www.irishtimes.com/crime-law/2023/09/28/us-sanctions-colombian-cartel-leader-linked-to-157m-irish-cocaine-haul/

    https://www.policia.es/_es/comunicacion_prensa_detalle.php?ID=15905

  • Scam call centres are a blight on the lives of anyone unfortunate enough to have any dealings with them. They come to you with promises of a short cut to wealth, to fix a non-existent issue with your computer, claiming to be from a charity, threatening you with arrest for unpaid taxes.

    There are 70 million of these phone calls worldwide every day and they generate billions of dollars each year. Organized crime is very much a part of this industry from Mexico to India and from the Philippines to Ukraine.

    In this episode we delve into the hundreds, possibly thousands of scam call centres based in Ukraine, where investment scams are mainly targeting Russians.

    Links:

    Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime

    PORT IN A STORM: Organized crime in Odesa since the Russian invasion

    New front lines: Organized criminal economies in Ukraine in 2022

    Global Organized Crime Index

    Additional Reading:...

  • For over half a century armed groups in Colombia have battled one another and the state across the country. The FARC, ELN, AUC, AGC, and the infamous drug cartels, have committed untold atrocities on everyday Colombians. These groups use violence to control the local population and to assert territorial control over illicit drug production and trafficking routes.

    This episode is about the people who live in those areas, those that have suffered at the hands of armed groups and organized crime, and those who put themselves at risk to fight for a better future for their communities.

    Speaker(s):

    Felipe Botero Escobar, Head of Colombia Programmes, Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime

    Joshua Mitrotti - Director of Somos Comunidad (Resilience Community). Somos Comunidad is backed by USAID, and implemented by FUPAD Colombia and the PADF, who work alongside GI-TOC. Through a series initiatives in rural communities affected by violence, Somos Comunidad is trying to enhance community resilience and contribute to human security.

    Community Leaders – Yolima, Yenis, Nancy, Luz, Luis

    Initiative Beneficiaries – Jamileth, Dana, Dayanis, Nicole, Sofia

    Links:

    Somos Comunidad

    Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime

    PADF

    Research Links:

    https://www.eluniversal.com.co/sucesos/masacre-en-el-carmen-de-bolivar-mi-hijo-era-un-nino-venia-de-la-tienda-NF3447834

    https://aldianews.com/en/culture/destinations/worlds-first-soda-pop

    https://www.semana.com/nacion/cartagena/articulo/golpe-a-la-delincuencia-caen-13-presuntos-integrantes-de-la-subestructura-heroes-del-caribe/202204/

    https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/former-leader-violent-clan-del-golfo-drug-trafficking-organization-pleads-guilty

    https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/VC.IHR.PSRC.P5?locations=CO

    https://colombiareports.com/assassinations-driving-increase-in-colombias-homicides-report/

  • For around two years the Conti ransomware group rampaged across the internet. They attacked hospitals, educational institutions, businesses, governments, and many more, raking in hundreds of millions of dollars in ransomware payments.

    Business was booming for the cybercriminals. At least it was until the Russian President Vladimir Putin announced the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The Conti leadership quickly pledged their loyalty to Russia and then everything began to fall apart.

    This is the story of one of the most professional, prolific, and devastating organized cybercriminal groups in history.

    Speaker(s):

    Selena Larson – Senior Threat Intelligence Analyst and DISCARDED Podcast Co-host at Proofpoint - Twitter

    Berk Albayrak, Threat Intelligence Analyst within the PRODAFT Threat Intelligence team and expert on Wizard Spider - Twitter

    Conor Gallagher – Crime and Security Correspondent of the Irish Times - Twitter

    Allan Liska, Threat Intelligence Analyst at Recorded Future and author of Ransomware: Understand. Precent. Recover. - Twitter

    Juan Ignacio Nicolossi, the team leader for the Threat Intelligence Team at PRODAFT.

    Zoë Brammer, Cyber & Information Operations Associate at the Institute for Security and Technology - Ransomware Ecosystem Map

    Jake Moore, Global Cybersecurity Advisor for ESET.

    Artwork by Paulina Rosol-Barrass

    Additional Reading:

    Reports/Papers:

    PRODAFT - Conti Ransomware Group In-Depth Analysis

    PRODAFT - Wizard Spider In-Depth Analysis

    Google - Fog of War: How the Ukraine Conflict Transformed the Cyber Threat Landscape

    DISCARDED Podcast (Proofpoint) -

  • Throughout history soldiers have used drugs, sometimes to fight better or to stay alert, or perhaps to help cope with the extreme psychological situation and trauma they are faced with. The current conflict in Ukraine is no different.

    Concerns around this led to the Ukrainian parliament passing a new law that authorizes random drug and alcohol tests on soldiers. Organized crime is nothing if not adaptable, even in this most extreme environment. The soldiers fighting to protect their homeland represent a new and relatively wealthy market, ripe for criminal networks to exploit. And they are doing just that.

    So who is behind this market? This is a story about war, drugs, the darknet and corruption.

    Speaker(s):

    Ted

    Sasha

    Additional Reading:

    (GI Paper) New front lines: Organized criminal economies in Ukraine in 2022

    Business Insider - Russian lawmakers baselessly claim their army is up against biologically modified Ukrainian super soldiers

    LiveScience - Nazis Dosed Soldiers with Performance-Boosting 'Superdrug'

    History - G.I.s’ Drug Use in Vietnam Soared—With Their Commanders’ Help

    The Atlantic - The Drugs That Built a Super Soldier

    Journeyman Pictures - Sierra Leone's Cocaine-Drugged Child Soldiers

    Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime - Lebanon’s role in Syria’s Captagon trade

    Washington Post - Zelensky takes on Ukraine’s top internal enemy

    Legatum Institute - Looting Ukraine: The East, the West and the Corruption of a Country (Full Version)

    Transparency International - Corruption Perceptions Index

    US DoJ Press release - Justice Department Investigation Leads to Shutdown of Largest Online Darknet Marketplace

    Chainalysis - OFAC Sanctions Hydra Following Law Enforcement Shutdown of the Darknet Market, As Well As Russian Exchange Garantex

    National Institute on Drug Abuse - Synthetic Cathinones ("Bath Salts") DrugFacts

    UNIAN.info - SBU busts major drug lab in Kyiv region in raid...

  • Part 2: "The truth will triumph".

    The description of Ahmed's murder showed that the killers were professionals, trained in the use of firearms. But despite the crowds that witnessed the killing, no one has ever been prosecuted for the crime.

    Since the assassination of Ahmed, press freedom in Ghana has suffered. He is one of a number that have been attacked, harassed and arrested over the last few years, sparking fears for the future of press freedom in the country.

    Much of the violence has been committed by state forces, either the police or the military, and yet impunity reigns and consequences are minimal.

    We will look at the organized crime landscape in Ghana, and how alongside the traditional illicit markets such as drug trafficking and illegal mining, organized crime is at the forefront of the commercialization of violence.

    Speaker(s):

    Anas Aremeyaw Anas – Multi-award winning Ghananian Investigative Journalist and founder of the TigerEye PI, an investigative organisation in Ghana – famous motto “name, shame and jail”.

    Muheeb Saeed, the program manager for Freedom of Expression at the Media Foundation for West Africa, the MFWA, which is a press freedom and media development organization based in Accra, but working across the West African sub-region.

    Gideon Ofosu-Peasah, Analyst at the Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime.

    Jonathan Rozen, Senior Africa researcher at the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ).

    Ana Paula Oliveira – Analyst and Manager of Assassination Witness Project, GITOC.

    Liliane MOUAN – Senior Advisor on Corruption and Human Rights – West and Central Africa for Amnesty International.

    Additional Reading:

    Assassination Witness Project

    Ahmed Divela - Faces of Assassination

    Global Assassination Monitor

    The Ripple Effect: the impact of contract killings (Podcast)

    Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) - Four years since murder of Ahmed Hussein-Suale Divela, Ghana’s journalists still attacked with impunity.

    Reporters Without Borders (RSF) Freedom of the Press Index

    (GITOC Paper) The business of killing: Assassinations in South Africa

    (GITOC Paper) Killing in silence: New research uncovers sheer magnitude of assassinations linked to organized crime

    Murder of journalists in Mexico a threat to democracy: El asesinato de periodistas en México pone en peligro la democracia

    (Deep Dive Podcast) Killing the Power of the Pen: Violence against journalists in Mexico - Part 1; Part 2.

    (Deep Dive Podcast)

  • Part 1: "Ahmed was no coward".

    On World Press Freedom Day (3rd May) 2018, the Ghanaian President, Nana Akufo-Addo, took to the stage in Accra to deliver a speech on press freedom. Ghana, had long been a beacon for press freedom and was selected to host the celebrations.

    Just a few weeks later, TigerEye PI, the world famous undercover investigative unit led by Anas Aremeyaw Anas released their latest investigation, Number 12, which looked at corruption in professional football.

    Around the same time, an MP, who disapproved of the methods of TigerEye PI, outed one of its undercover journalists, Ahmed Hussein-Suale Divela, live on air by showing his picture and calling for him to be attacked.

    A few months later Ahmed was shot and killed in a targeted assassination on the streets of Madina in Accra.

    In these two episodes we will tell the story of Ahmed, his death, what it means for press freedom in Ghana and how the commercialisation of violence is a perfect opportunity for organized crime.

    Speaker(s):

    Anas Aremeyaw Anas, Multi-award winning Ghanaian Investigative Journalist and founder of the TigerEye PI, an investigative organisation in Ghana – famous motto “name, shame and jail”.

    Jonathan Rozen, Senior Africa researcher at the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)

    Additional Reading:

    Assassination Witness Project

    Ahmed Divela - Faces of Assassination

    Global Assassination Monitor

    The Ripple Effect: the impact of contract killings (Podcast)

    Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) - Four years since murder of Ahmed Hussein-Suale Divela, Ghana’s journalists still attacked with impunity.

    Reporters Without Borders (RSF) Freedom of the Press Index

    (GITOC Paper) The business of killing: Assassinations in South Africa

    (GITOC Paper) Killing in silence: New research uncovers sheer magnitude of assassinations linked to organized crime

    Murder of journalists in Mexico a threat to democracy: El asesinato de periodistas en México pone en peligro la democracia

    (Deep Dive Podcast) Killing the Power of the Pen: Violence against journalists in Mexico - Part 1; Part 2.

    (Deep Dive Podcast) Killing in Silence: The Global Assassination Monitor.

    (Deep Dive Podcast) Guinea-Bissau Part 2: Pau de Sangue (Blood Timber).

    Kennedy Agyapong Says He...

  • Part 2: “It’s the worst kept secret in Sudan”.

    In 2019, the Dossier Centre in London, shared some leaked internal documents from the private military company, the Wagner Group. The documents showed that Wagner had identified several countries they wanted to target for future operations. What was clear is that they often targeted countries with weakened autocratic government, seeking support against an internal threat.

    In this episode, we navigate the illicit gold trade in Sudan and beyond by studying a complex corporate web. How these structures are used to bypass sanctions and whether the US designation of the Wagner Group as a "Transnational Criminal Organization" adds anything to the fight.

    Speaker(s):

    Julia Stanyard, senior analyst at the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime and author of the paper ‘The Grey Zone: Russia’s military, mercenary and criminal engagement in Africa’.

    Thierry Vircoulon, Research associate at the French Institute for International Affairs in Paris, member of the GI Network of Experts and a lead author of ‘The Grey Zone: Russia’s military, mercenary and criminal engagement in Africa’.

    Kholood Khair - the Founder and Director of Confluence Advisory, Khartoum.

    Ken Opala, the Field Network Coordinator for East and Southern Africa, Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime.

    Mohanad Hashim, freelance Sudanese journalist, currently working at the BBC.

    Jason Blazakis, Professor and Director of the Center on Terrorism, Extremism and Counterterrorism at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies.

    Justin Lynch, researcher, and author of Sudan’s Unfinished Democracy.

    Additional Reading:

    (GI Paper)The grey zone: Russia's military, mercenary and criminal engagement in Africa

    (GI Paper) Going for Gold: Russia, sanctions and illicit gold trade

    'If you desert, we'll execute you': 'Putin's chef' recruits convicts for war Yevgeny Prigozhin: UK reviews rules after Wagner head sued journalist

    UK exposes sick Russian troll factory plaguing social media with Kremlin propaganda

    Fake news and public executions: Documents show a Russian company’s plan for quelling protests in Sudan

    Wagner chief admits to founding Russian troll farm sanctioned for meddling in US elections

    Ukraine capital Kyiv endures Russian onslaught - BBC News

    Russia is plundering gold in Sudan to boost Putin’s war effort in Ukraine

    Sudan TV broadcast taken off air after loud bangs during military clashes

  • Part 1: “Who are these guys and what are they doing here?”

    In late February 2022, Airport workers in Khartoum International Airport in Sudan are stood glued to television screens, watching Russian tanks entering the outskirts of Kyiv in Ukraine. But just outside on the runway, a Russian cargo plane laden with cookies was about to take off, heading to Latakia on the coast of Syria.

    Earlier that day, officials had inspected the aircraft, suspicious of the cargo manifest. It turned out they were right to be suspicious, because hidden under the cookies was gold. A ton of gold. But the military arrived and the plane was waived through.

    Gold is Sudan’s largest export, although 80% of that is thought to be smuggled out of the country. The industry has a number of players, including the Rapid Support Forces who are currently locked in battle with its rival the Sudanese Armed Forces . But there is also another active group that works alongside both these two forces and has its eyes firmly on Sudanese gold - the Wagner Group.

    Speaker(s):

    Kholood Khair - the Founder and Director of Confluence Advisory, Khartoum.

    Ken Opala, the Field Network Coordinator for East and Southern Africa, Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime.

    Mohanad Hashim, freelance Sudanese journalist, currently working at the BBC.

    Justin Lynch, researcher, and author of Sudan’s Unfinished Democracy.

    Additional Reading:

    (GI Paper)The grey zone: Russia's military, mercenary and criminal engagement in Africa

    (GI Paper) Going for Gold: Russia, sanctions and illicit gold trade

    'If you desert, we'll execute you': 'Putin's chef' recruits convicts for war Yevgeny Prigozhin: UK reviews rules after Wagner head sued journalist

    UK exposes sick Russian troll factory plaguing social media with Kremlin propaganda

    Fake news and public executions: Documents show a Russian company’s plan for quelling protests in Sudan

    Wagner chief admits to founding Russian troll farm sanctioned for meddling in US elections

    Ukraine capital Kyiv endures Russian onslaught - BBC News

    Russia is plundering gold in Sudan to boost Putin’s war effort in Ukraine

    Sudan TV broadcast taken off air after loud bangs during military clashes

    CNN - How Russia could be stealing over $13 billion of gold a year from Sudan

    Sudan fighting: RSF and...

  • Africa is often the forgotten continent for things like drug trafficking, but just look around the news, the African continent plays a critical role in the global illicit drug market – and its growing – And no more so than in East and Southern Africa. As global trade has exploded, African organized criminal networks have established relationships with other criminal organizations around the world from the PCC in Brazil to the Comancheros Bikie Gang in New Zealand.

    Over the course of a few years, the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime have produced three papers covering the major illicit drug markets in the region - cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamime (crystal meth). These papers cover the movement and transiting of drugs but also the domestic markets - and the findings are that you find drugs everywhere, in coastal cities and rural villages.

    In this episode we talk about all three illicit drugs, the markets, those involved and the users themselves.

    Speaker(s):

    Jason Eligh, Senior Expert, Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime

    x2 Anonyomous researchers (Kenya, South Africa)

    Happy Assan, Drug Researcher, Tanzania

    Additional Reading:

    (GI Paper) A Synthetic Age: The Evolution of Methamphetamine Markets in Eastern and Southern Africa - Link

    (GI Paper) A Powder Storm: The cocaine markets of East and southern Africa - Link

    (GI Paper) A Shallow Flood: The Diffusion of Heroin in Eastern and Southern Africa - Link

    (Website) Drug Markets in Eastern and Southern Africa - Link

    News Articles:

    Record Bust For Mozambique Bound Drugs - Link

    Mozambican arrested in Brazil with 5 kg of cocaine hidden in ‘7-day candles’ - Link

    BBC News - Fuminho: One of Brazil's most wanted criminals arrested in Mozambique - Link

    Insight Crime - Cocaine Trade Grows in East and Southern Africa - Link

    Insight Crime - Marcos Willians Herbas Camacho, alias ‘Marcola’ - Link

    National commander of Comancheros jailed for conspiring to import 600kg of meth - Link

    NZ Herald - Comancheros meth trial: Gang leader Seiana Fakaosilea, co-defendants sentenced - Link

    SunStar - CUSTOMS CLARK SEIZES P11.27M WORTH OF METH -

  • What does the term 'Environmental Crime' mean to you? Probably something like elephant or rhino poaching. Perhaps the plight of the pangolin, the adorable little armoured mammal, often sighted as the "most trafficked animal in the world". But it is so much more than that - from the illegal wildlife trade to illicit plastic waste, and from illegal mining to timber trafficking.

    The spotlight on environmental crime has never been more prominent, public consciousness around climate change has seen to that. Indeed, environmental crime was implicated in early theories surrounding the origin of COVID-19.

    And so, in this episode we'll show you the breadth of research taking place here at the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime. Through the story of our global responses to environmental crime we'll show just how integrated different illicit markets are with one another.

    (This podcast is based around the paper ‘An analytic review of past responses to ENVIRONMENTAL CRIME and programming recommendations’)

    Speaker(s):

    Simone Haysom, Thematic Lead on Environmental Crime, Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime

    Farai Maguwu, Director at the Center for Natural Resource Governance in Zimbabwe and member of the GI Network of Experts

    Vincent Opyene, a state-prosecutor in Uganda, specialising in wildlife crimes and founder of the Natural Resource Conservation Network.

    Karla Mendes, Investigative Journalist at Mongabay, a non-profit environmental science and conversation news platform.

    Peter Wagner, Director of the Service for Foreign Policy Instruments at the European Commission.

    Natalie Pauwels, the Head of Unit, Stability and Peace - Global and Trans regional Threats at the Service for Foreign Policy Instruments at the European Commission.

    Ana Paula Oliveira, Analyst at the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime and presenter of The Ripple Effect podcast, part of the Assassination Witness Project.

    Lucia Bird, Director of the West African Observatory, Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime

    Virginia Comolli, Senior Expert, Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime

    Jason Eligh, Senior Expert, Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime

    Additional Reading:

    (GI Paper) An analytic review of past responses to ENVIRONMENTAL CRIME and programming recommendations - Link

    (GI Paper) A Synthetic Age: The Evolution of Methamphetamine Markets in Eastern and Southern Africa - Link

    (GI Paper) Deep-rooted interests: Licensing illicit logging in Guinea Bissau - Link

    (GI Paper) Plastic for profit: Tracing illicit plastic waste flows, supply chains and actors - Link

    (GI Paper) Branches of Illegality: Cambodia's illegal logging structures - Link

    (GI Paper) Vietnam's virtual landscape for illicit wildlife trading: A snapshot of e-commerce and social media - Link

    (GI Paper) Civil Society Observatory of Illicit Economies in Eastern and Southern Africa Risk Bulletin - Issue 25 - Kromah Cartel -