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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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June 28, 2017
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Hizballah-linked
Paraguayan is Charged in Miami in a Drug Conspiracy
by IPT News • Jun 27, 2017 at
4:01 pm
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A Paraguayan man
with ties to Hizballah pleaded not guilty in Miami federal court on Monday,
after being charged with conspiring to distribute massive amounts of
cocaine to the United States, the Miami Herald reports.
Paraguay's authorities arrested Ali Issa Chamas in August at an
international airport for attempting to smuggle 39 kilos of cocaine. Chamas
was extradited to Miami in June and now awaits trial.
But Chamas' indictment
failed to reference his intimate relationship to Hizballah associates and
operatives.
Chamas is of Lebanese origin and lived in Paraguay over the last decade.
In addition to Brazil and Argentina, Paraguay is part of the Tri-Border
Area (TBA), a region that enables Hizballah to cultivate a major base of operations.
With a large Muslim population featuring significant numbers of Hizballah
sympathizers, the terrorist organization uses this area for recruitment,
arms smuggling and drug
trafficking, and logistics planning for terrorist operations.
The State Department has stated that the TBA remains "an important
regional nexus of arms, narcotics, pirated goods, human smuggling,
counterfeiting, and money laundering – all potential funding sources for
terrorist organizations."
Hizballah also relies on legitimate businesses and front organizations
in the region, diversifying its terrorist financing profile to generate a
significant portion of its revenues from its Latin American operations.
With Venezuelan government help, the terrorist group continues to expand
its presence and consolidate support in other Latin American countries. The
Treasury Department revealed that Venezuela's Vice President Tareck El
Aissami maintains intimate ties to Hizballah and helped
coordinate narcotics shipments to drug cartels operating on the U.S.
border, including Mexico's infamous Los Zetas. In 2011, Virginia
prosecutors said that a Lebanese man helped the Mexican Los Zetas drug
cartel smuggle of more than 100 tons of Colombian cocaine. The U.S.
Treasury Department claimed that Hizballah benefitted financially from the
criminal network.
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