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Belgium's Hidden Drug War At The Heart Of Europe
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Most people think of Brussels as the place where EU laws are written, not where drug gangs fight over territory. Yet Belgium today is living with a quiet drug war that is reshaping its politics, its streets and its reputation.
The story starts at the Port of Antwerp, one of Europe's busiest gateways for trade. Container ships from Latin America bring in legal goods – and huge quantities of cocaine.
Belgian customs now seize well over 100 tonnes a year, a record that shows not only tough inspections but also the gigantic scale of the business. If that much is caught, you can imagine how much gets through.
Drug money has flowed into the port's workforce. Investigations based on hacked cartel chats revealed dockers, customs officers and security staff paid to“lose” containers or look the other way.
Some insiders are reportedly offered six-figure sums for a single successful shipment. That kind of cash doesn't just buy silence. It buys influence, lawyers, politicians, property – and violence.
What once felt like a distant port problem now hits ordinary neighbourhoods. In Brussels and Antwerp, residents have seen shootings, grenade attacks and explosions linked to drug disputes.
Parents worry about their children walking past buildings that were bombed the night before. For many expats, this is not the version of“capital of Europe” they signed up for.
Belgium cracks down on organized crime
The darkest turn is the pressure on judges and prosecutors. Belgian authorities say they foiled a plot to kill Brussels' chief prosecutor; others in the justice system now live with bodyguards.
One judge, forced into hiding, warned publicly that criminal“mafia structures” are eating into the state from within. That is when people started to use the word“narco-state” without irony.
Behind the scenes, Belgium is finally hardening its stance: more resources for police and customs, closer work with other EU ports, even calls for help from the United States. The country still has strong institutions and a free press.
But the era of looking away is over. For anyone living, investing or working in Europe's political capital, this is no longer just a Belgian problem – it is a test of how seriously Europe defends its own home base.
The story starts at the Port of Antwerp, one of Europe's busiest gateways for trade. Container ships from Latin America bring in legal goods – and huge quantities of cocaine.
Belgian customs now seize well over 100 tonnes a year, a record that shows not only tough inspections but also the gigantic scale of the business. If that much is caught, you can imagine how much gets through.
Drug money has flowed into the port's workforce. Investigations based on hacked cartel chats revealed dockers, customs officers and security staff paid to“lose” containers or look the other way.
Some insiders are reportedly offered six-figure sums for a single successful shipment. That kind of cash doesn't just buy silence. It buys influence, lawyers, politicians, property – and violence.
What once felt like a distant port problem now hits ordinary neighbourhoods. In Brussels and Antwerp, residents have seen shootings, grenade attacks and explosions linked to drug disputes.
Parents worry about their children walking past buildings that were bombed the night before. For many expats, this is not the version of“capital of Europe” they signed up for.
Belgium cracks down on organized crime
The darkest turn is the pressure on judges and prosecutors. Belgian authorities say they foiled a plot to kill Brussels' chief prosecutor; others in the justice system now live with bodyguards.
One judge, forced into hiding, warned publicly that criminal“mafia structures” are eating into the state from within. That is when people started to use the word“narco-state” without irony.
Behind the scenes, Belgium is finally hardening its stance: more resources for police and customs, closer work with other EU ports, even calls for help from the United States. The country still has strong institutions and a free press.
But the era of looking away is over. For anyone living, investing or working in Europe's political capital, this is no longer just a Belgian problem – it is a test of how seriously Europe defends its own home base.
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