
He
didn’t want to say what the alternatives are,
because he didn’t want to help the underworld to
get more ideas.
“But I observe that there are a lot of
drugs on the island.”
Van der Straten travels to the Netherlands
next week to talk to the department of Home
Affairs. He expects to also talk about his plea for a coastguard
support point on the island.
When
minister Johan Remkes (Home Affairs, VVD) visited
the island last week, Van der Straten didn’t get
a chance to mention this to him. He considers a point of support with fast boats that can
chase the go-fasts with drugs, firearms, and
illegal persons to be essential.
“We cannot be emphasizing on just the
controls at the airport, when we do not have
sufficient control on other points of entrance of
the drugs.”
A
radar is going to be installed in Bonaire that can
follow all suspicious movements, so a point of
support is actually indispensable and possible,
even though this depends on whether financing was
arranged for this.
“But the minister himself has agreed to
expand the border patrol.”
Van
der Straten is of the opinion that the civil
servants that are currently in charge of
controlling the criminality and the borders must
get more authority, because these are too limited
now. He
didn’t want to say what these limitations are.
All he had to say was that “it is too
bureaucratic.”
Source: Amigoe.com