Paris drug dealers say they're ready for Olympics too
![Paris drug dealers say they're ready for Olympics too Paris drug dealers say they're ready for Olympics too](https://citizentv.obs.af-south-1.myhuaweicloud.com/129879/conversions/AFP__20240720__364J3XN__v1__HighRes__FranceCrimeInvestigation-og_image.webp)
This photograph shows a generale view of the area where the body of two men were shot dead and a third seriously wounded on July 19 evening, in Bobigny neighbourhood of Seine-Saint-Denis, a northern Paris suburb, on July 20, 2024. Two men were shot dead and a third seriously injured on July 19, 2024, evening in Bobigny, in a shootout probably linked to drug trafficking. (Photo by Dimitar DILKOFF / AFP)
France has declared itself prepared for the
deluge of Olympics visitors -- and so have Paris's drug dealers.
The dealers have promised a steady supply of
wares, but warned prices may go up and delivery wait times too under the weight
of tens of thousands of security forces and heavy demand.
From Parisians renting out their apartments, to
a transit system that has boosted its ticket prices, everyone is looking to
make a buck during the Games -- and that includes the underworld.
"We're always ready in this business,"
a Parisian dealer told AFP, echoing French leader Emmanuel Macron's judgment
this week that his nation is all set for the Games.
"There will always be somebody ready,
that's how it is when there's money to be made," said the dealer, on
condition of anonymity.
With up to 45,000 security forces policing the
streets, experts expect delivery services will see a bump in clients seeking to
avoid getting busted.
In fact, France has already had a boom in
messaging app and social media-driven drug deliveries since pandemic lockdowns
pushed the trade off the street and onto smartphone screens.
At the same time, the country has voiced
increasing alarm over a flourishing drug trade and deadly violence between
rival gangs.
"There is a kind of Uberisation of drug
trafficking, with the development of digital offerings on applications like
Telegram, or promotional deals," said criminal attorney Adrien Gabeaud.
In the run-up to the Games, dealers have been
updating their clients on feeds with what to expect during the competition that
opens Friday and runs through August 11.
"The prices of our services will be
adjusted due to challenging road traffic conditions and heavy demand," one
seller wrote to customers.
Swathes of central Paris are blocked off during
the festivities, snarling car and pedestrian traffic enough that the Parisian
dealer said it wouldn't be worth the trouble, even to see the events.
In one exchange between a seller and customer,
seen by AFP, the dealer warns that transactions cannot happen in the open.
"The police are on the lookout," the
message read.
Yet other dealers are sending out messages to
assure clients, like one that wrote: "I inform you that despite the
Olympics, the delivery service will remain the same."
It's too soon to gauge whether or how much
prices could rise, but criminal lawyer David Curiel predicted they're on their
way up.
"In Paris a gram of cocaine costs 50-60
euros ($55-65), but now it could probably go up to 80 euros a gram," he
said.
"They (dealers) can't wait, for them this
is like the sales," he added, referring to France's government-set
promotion periods when shoppers flock to stores.
- 'Incredible' amount of
drugs -
France has pledged to crack down on digital drug
sales and has deployed massive amounts of police to patrol Paris during the
Games that are expected to attract 15 million people.
An AFP check of drug sales prices advertised on
messaging apps did not reveal an immediate spike, and police sources were also
sceptical.
"No 'Olympics effect' so far" on
boosting drug sales, a narcotics investigator told AFP, again on condition of
anonymity.
"There's already an incredible amount (of
drugs) on offer," the investigator noted.
On that much, the police and dealers seem to
agree.
"During Covid it was different. There was
an incredible spike in prices, by two or three times. It was a fight to find
anything," the Parisian dealer said. "It's been fine ahead of the
Olympics."
The real effect on Paris's –- and France's -–
drug market won't become clear immediately but researchers have begun pondering
the impact.
"Law enforcement is heavily mobilised for
the Olympics, but is that going to give (dealers) more opportunity to pursue
their business elsewhere in France?" asked economist Nacer Lalam.
"That will be
something we won't know until after the fact."
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