
Former prosecutor Eugen Beci made strong accusations against the Rama government, revealing a frightening behind-the-scenes connection between the Justice Reform and drug trafficking.
According to Beci, after 2013, a legal infrastructure was built that did not fight crime, but paved the way for the capture of the state by organized crime.
According to him, the Justice Reform turned into a tool to weaken the justice system and protect the interests of narcopolitics, he said on "SyriTv".
Eugen Beci: We need to see it in a clear chronology, which must necessarily combine the legal infrastructure, the desire of organized crime and the cooperation of politics with it. Why do I say legal infrastructure?
Since 2013, a legal structure has been built that, instead of cracking down on the phenomenon of cannabis cultivation, has facilitated and spread it throughout the territory. Initially, the action against Lazarat gave the signal that the state was taking action, but in reality, this paved the way for the informal legalization of cannabis cultivation throughout the country.
In parallel with the Justice Reform, the way in which this legal infrastructure would serve drug trafficking was also shaped. This may seem like a harsh statement, but it is a reality. Organized crime, in addition to attempting to buy the state, law enforcement structures and specific individuals, through politically driven reforms has been able to create a system that serves its interests.
In short, the Justice Reform hit the Prosecution Service and the Courts, using the public's sincere desire for change as an excuse. In this process, the so-called "narcopolitics" began to function, which on the surface appears modern and pro-European, but is essentially an infrastructure that favors drug trafficking.
Before the Reform, the prosecution of drug trafficking was the sole competence of the Serious Crimes Prosecution Office. This approach had two clear goals: first, to minimize the risk of corruption of officials and, second, to guarantee a high level of specialization in investigations that require advanced and special methods.
Today, the competence for investigating drug trafficking is no longer in the hands of SPAK, but of the Prosecutor's Offices of General Jurisdiction. This is a direct blow to the seriousness of the fight against organized crime and a deliberate weakening of the structures that were supposed to keep the country clean from drug trafficking.
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