$1.2B of cocaine transits though W. Africa each year; Security Council has 'deep concern'
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}The U.N. secretary-general says an estimated $1.2 billion worth of cocaine transits through West Africa each year, and the Security Council is expressing "deep concern" about the drug trade's increasing links to terrorist groups.
The council issued a presidential statement Wednesday after Ban Ki-moon briefed it on the widespread risks to stability in a region where borders are porous, governments are poorly funded and extremists groups are active.
West Africa's recent rise as a route for cocaine and other drugs from Latin America to Europe has startled the international community.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}Diplomats now point out that the region is producing its own drugs, including methamphetamine.
Ban says the region now has "more than a million users of illicit drugs," which hurts development in the vast region.