A groundbreaking multinational investigation has revealed the Caribbean’s escalating transformation into a primary nexus for sophisticated transnational criminal operations, marking an unprecedented level of global law enforcement collaboration. The comprehensive report, developed through the joint efforts of EL PACCTO 2.0 (an EU-funded initiative) and InSight Crime with strategic input from CARICOM IMPACS, EMPACT, FRONTEX, and France’s General Prosecutor’s Office in Martinique, represents the first coordinated international effort to map the intricate architecture of Caribbean-based illicit networks.
The study, titled “Criminal Networks and Routes from the Caribbean to Europe: A Deep-Dive into Cocaine Trafficking and Other Illicit Activities,” provides an exhaustive analysis of the region’s emerging function as a crucial conduit in the global illegal supply chain. It identifies the so-called “Southern Corridor”—encompassing Guyana, Suriname, and French Guiana—as particularly strategic zones within the international illicit trade ecosystem.
According to the findings, criminal organizations orchestrating cocaine shipments to European ports simultaneously engage in environmental crimes, weapons trafficking, and advanced money laundering schemes. The investigation further highlights critical vulnerabilities in both maritime and digital infrastructures, tracing a sophisticated pipeline that originates at remote Caribbean marinas and terminates at major European container terminals.
Law enforcement agencies confront substantial challenges due to fragmented legal frameworks and insufficient resources to monitor a maritime territory exceeding half the size of the European Union. During the report’s launch at CARICOM IMPACS headquarters in Trinidad and Tobago on March 2, 2026, Executive Director Lt. Col. Michael Jones emphasized the paradigm shift from reactive defense to proactive, intelligence-driven disruption strategies.
Marc Reina Tortosa of EL PACCTO 2.0 described the evolving criminal landscape, noting that fluid, transactional networks have replaced traditional cartels, with European and Western Balkan brokers functioning as invisible architects of the trade. These networks demonstrate remarkable adaptability, shifting between maritime, aerial, and riverine routes—particularly those connecting the Amazon to the Atlantic—when confronted with enforcement pressure.
The study further reveals an undeniable polycriminal dimension where drug trafficking intersects with environmental crimes like illegal gold mining in the Guianas. French judicial official Patrice Camberou highlighted the complexities of prosecuting transnational crime in EU territories located within the Americas, advocating for harmonized prosecutorial strategies with CARICOM and South American partners.
Evelina Melbarzde of the EU Delegation to Trinidad and Tobago underscored the report’s significance as a foundational document for the new EMPACT 2026–2029 cycle, which aims to integrate Caribbean security concerns into Europe’s core law enforcement priorities. Participants unanimously characterized the report as a dynamic tool requiring sustained funding, enhanced maritime patrol capabilities, modernized port security infrastructure, and seamless information sharing mechanisms to effectively combat criminal networks whose agility continues to outpace traditional law enforcement approaches.
