G7 France: The Évian Summit

BORDER SECURITY //

T his is a critical moment in global efforts to address illicit drugs and organised crime. The illicit drug trade is no longer an isolated threat. What was once viewed as a shadowy underworld has evolved into a sophisticated and interlinked system of power and organised crime. Criminal networks are adapting faster than ever, exploiting conflict zones, governance gaps and economic despera- tion to expand their reach. At the same time, the nature of the illicit drug trade is shift- ing in dangerous ways. Synthetic drugs are becoming far more potent, harder to detect and cheaper to produce, lowering the barri- ers to entry for traffickers and increasing the risk for users. Supply chains have become more agile and decentralised. These dynamics are playing out across multiple regions. In Southeast Asia, meth- amphetamine production continues at industrial levels. In the Middle East, the Captagon trade is expanding its reach within and beyond the region. In hotspots such as Haiti, drug-funded gangs are not just profiting from chaos; they are actively driving it. And in West Africa and the Sahel, drug trafficking is compounding and taking advantage of insecurity and weak borders to entrench itself. Meanwhile, plant-based products such as cocaine continue to flow at high levels from Latin America, driving up violence in major ports and along supply chains to meet rising demand in Europe, and reaching new markets in Africa and Asia. A GLOBAL CRIMINAL SYSTEM What ties all these trends together is the expansion of a broader criminal ecosystem. Traffickers are leveraging technology, with cyber-enabled trafficking lowering risks and widening criminals’ reach. They are also branching out into other criminal activi- ties including human trafficking, the illegal arms trade and environmental crimes such as illegal mining and deforestation. The result is a global organised enter- prise generating billions in illicit profits, distorting economies, fuelling corruption and accelerating money laundering, includ- ing through cryptocurrencies. No country can confront these challenges alone. The scale and interconnected nature of the threat require a coordinated and multilat- eral response. John Brandolino, director, Division for Treaty Affairs, United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime

Against this backdrop, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime plays a critical role. We work across borders and sectors to support countries in addressing drug and crime-related threats. We provide plat- forms and networks to facilitate dialogue and international cooperation between gov- ernments, law enforcement, civil society and the private sector. On the ground, we provide technical assistance, training and operational support to strengthen needed national capaci- ties. Through our early warning systems and improved data collection, we are mon- itoring more than 1,400 new psychoactive substances, giving governments a critical edge in responding to rapidly shifting risks. And with the recent adoption of the United Nations Cybercrime Convention, countries now have a new framework to address the growing role of digital technologies in drug trafficking. OUTPACING THE NETWORKS: REBUILDING CAPACITY AND COORDINATION We have made some important progress. Awareness of the scale and complexity of the world drug problem has grown, along with recognition of its links to other forms of organised crime. International cooperation, while under pressure, continues to deliver results. But the gap between the pace of criminal innovation and the global response remains wide. Capacity is uneven, resources are stretched and political attention is often diverted elsewhere. Closing that gap requires renewed com- mitment. This is where the G7 can make a difference and why the Évian Summit comes at a critical time. With members’ combined resources, technical expertise and political influ- ence, the G7 can help set the direction of the global response. This means strengthening cross-border cooperation and intelligence sharing, investing in technologies and sup- porting more coordinated law enforcement efforts. Equally important is the need to build stronger partnerships with countries out- side the G7. Many of the regions affected by drug trafficking are in the Global South. Supporting these countries will be essential for long-term success. The stakes are clear. Countering the world drug problem is about defend- ing stability in an increasingly unstable world. With coordinated action, sustained resources and political will, we can fight back. UNODC stands ready to support the G7 in this effort.

// JOHN BRANDOLINO John Brandolino joined the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime in 2015 as director of the Division for Treaty Affairs, overseeing UN mandated policy processes on drugs, corruption, organised crime, money launder- ing, cybercrime and terrorism. Previously, he served 15 years in management and senior adviser positions at the US State Depart- ment’s Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforce- ment Affairs, including as acting deputy assistant secretary and director for the Office of Anticrime Programs.

X-TWITTER @JohnBrandolino @unodc  unodc.org

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