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The arrest of an alleged cousin of Osama bin Laden, accused of running a human trafficking ring in Ecuador, is another sign of how lax visa policies have fed the growth of such smuggling networks.
Besides claims in Ecuadorian and Colombian media, there is little evidence that Eritrean national Yaee Dawit Tadese, alias "Jack Flora," is indeed part of the extended bin Laden family.
Tadese was reportedly arrested March 10 during a raid in Quito, in a joint operation by Ecuadorian police and Colombia's elite anti-kidnapping squad, known as GAULA.
According to Guayaquil-based newspaper El Universal, the arrest of Tadese and 66 other nationals from Asia, Africa and the Middle East was part of an investigation into a human smuggling ring. Tadese was reportedly deported to the U.S. on March 12, as he was wanted by Interpol on terrorism, drug and human trafficking charges.
Colombian police told El Tiempo that Tadese managed a network that trafficked migrants from Africa, using two popular routes running from Somalia to either Ecuador or Venezuela.
Regardless of Tadese's alleged family ties, the arrest is a reminder of how much human trafficking has expanded in Ecuador since 2008. That was the year that Ecuador waived visa requirements for almost every country in the world, allowing visitors to enter the country and automatically gain a 90-day pass.
As a result, Ecuador has seen the growth of Colombian, Russian and Chinese organized crime groups operating within its borders. This includes smugglers moving human cargo from Ecuador to Central America, then onwards to the United States. As noted by El Comercio, migration police have seen an explosion of African and Asian nationals moving through the country, with 156 reported arrivals from South Africa during the first quarter of 2011.
A 2009 report by the International Assessment and Strategy Center found that Ecuador's lax visa policies may have also increased the smuggling of Asian and African migrants from the Andean nation to the U.S. The report quotes one unnamed U.S. official who maintains that, "In every major case of nonâMexican and nonâCentral American illegal immigrants entering the United States in the past year the migrants have transited Ecuador."
http://insightcrime.org/insight-latest-news/item/873-bin-ladens-cousin-arrested-in-ecuador
Answer
No, he was smuggling Seal Team 6 members into Pakistan.
No, he was smuggling Seal Team 6 members into Pakistan.
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