US indictment against Maduro alleges Caribbean politicians protected drug traffickers
Source: CNW
A United States criminal indictment against Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, released following his reported capture during a US military operation on January 3, alleges that politicians along a “Caribbean route” accepted payments from cocaine traffickers in exchange for protection from arrest and freedom to operate as drugs moved north toward the United States.
The indictment was made public hours after US President Donald Trump announced that Maduro and his wife had been captured and removed from Venezuela. US officials later said Maduro would face trial in the United States on criminal charges.
The indictment claims that drug trafficking networks operating out of Venezuela relied on systemic corruption across the region, with political protection playing a central role in the movement of cocaine from South America through the Caribbean, Central America, and Mexico.
“Through this drug trafficking, NICOLAS MADURO MOROS, the defendant, and corrupt members of his regime enabled corruption fueled by drug trafficking throughout the region,” the indictment states.
According to US prosecutors, traffickers paid politicians in key transit countries a share of their profits to secure protection and political cover.
“The transhipment points in Honduras, Guatemala, and Mexico similarly relied on a culture of corruption, in which cocaine traffickers operating in those countries paid a portion of their own profits to politicians who protected and aided them,” the document says. “In turn, these politicians used the cocaine-fueled payments to maintain and augment their political power.”
The indictment specifically references corruption tied to trafficking routes through the Caribbean, though it does not name individual Caribbean officials.
“So, too, were politicians along the ‘Caribbean route’ corrupted by cocaine traffickers, who would pay them for protection from arrest and to allow favoured traffickers to operate with impunity as they trafficked cocaine from Venezuela north towards the United States,” prosecutors allege.
US authorities describe Venezuela as a strategic hub for drug trafficking, citing its geographic position and access to key maritime routes.
“Venezuela sits in a geographically valuable location for drug traffickers, with northern access to the Caribbean Sea via several large ports and western access to the mountainous regions of Colombia, where coca is grown and turned into the vast majority of the world’s cocaine supply,” the indictment states.
The document alleges that beginning around 1999, Venezuela became a “safe haven” for traffickers willing to pay for protection from corrupt civilian and military officials, allowing cocaine trafficking to flourish.
“In that environment, cocaine trafficking flourished,” the indictment says, alleging that senior Venezuelan officials and their family members “partnered with narcotics traffickers and narco-terrorist groups” to move cocaine through Caribbean and Central American transshipment points.
Named in the indictment alongside Maduro are several senior figures, including Diosdado Cabello Rondón, Ramón Rodríguez Chacín, Cilia Adela Flores de Maduro, and Nicolás Ernesto Maduro Guerra, also known as “Nicolasito” or “The Prince.”
US prosecutors estimate that by 2020, “between 200 and 250 tons of cocaine were trafficked through Venezuela annually,” with shipments moving through the Caribbean and Central America en route to the United States.
While the indictment does not identify specific Caribbean politicians, the allegations have heightened regional scrutiny as the case unfolds, raising broader questions about political corruption, drug trafficking, and security along Caribbean transit routes.