Showing posts with label san andresitos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label san andresitos. Show all posts

Thursday, July 2, 2015

Commerce Equals Crime?

'I'm a storekeeper, not a criminal.'
Owners and employees of the San Andresitos and other businesses with a reputation for selling contraband products marched down Calle 13 today protesting a proposed law which would stiffen punishments for selling contraband goods or having links to money laundering. 

The sellers charge that the law equates doing retail business with criminality. But not all commerce is criminal, just that which doesn't pay taxes or follow laws.

The trouble for the San Andresitos is a simple one: Their cheap cheapo business model is based on one thing: contraband goods, and many of those are linked to money laundering.

Tough luck for them. But they should look at the bright side - the government has never effectively enforced such laws, and they're unlikely to do so this time.


Riot police on Calle 13.
The law, yes, but not this way.
United for the right to work.

Waving the flag on Plaza San Victorino.


'For the right to work. A law with social justice.'



The San Andresitos on Calle 13 were closed, for once.
By Mike Ceaser, of Bogotá Bike Tours

Saturday, June 20, 2015

The Outlaw Economy


San Andresitos workers fill Simon Bolivar plaza in protest against an anti-contraband law.
They're scattered across Bogotá, with names like San Victorino and San Andresitos - the latter named
Protesters wearing shirts charging that the anti-contraband
law would mean monopolies and destroy small businesses. 
after Colombia's Caribbean island of San Andres, which are notorious for smuggling. These stores' cheap imported goods carry a reputation for being contraband and often serving for laundering drug money.

At least, that's what many authorities believe. And perhaps the best evidence that they're right came the other day when thousands of owners and employees of the San Andresitos filled San Victorino and Simon Bolivar plazas with a deafening protest against a law raising penalties and jail terms for buying and selling contraband goods.

Colombia's huge contraband industry might seem innocent enough: It provides cheap imported running shoes, electronics and refrigerators, not to mention all of the gasoline consumed in regions near the Venezuelan border. It also employs many thousands of Colombians.

San Andresitos stores on Calle 13 in Bogota.
However, cheap smuggled goods don't pay taxes, depriving the state of money for schools, roads and police and hurt domestic manufacturing. This is felt particularly in provincial health programs, which are financed by duties and taxes on cigarettes and whiskey - two heavily smuggled items. The cheap, smuggled, untaxed products are also particularly cheap, placing them within the reach of children.

However, contraband's worst impact might be its role in money laundering. Drug cartels find it difficult bringing their illegal millions in profits back into Colombia thru the banking system. So, they convert them into legal goods, which may be either legally imported or smuggled in thru places like the La Guajira peninsula and marketed in the San Andresitos.

For years during the late 1990s and early 2000s, cigarette makers Philip Morris and British
Cigarettes, many of them smuggled, for sale
next to candy in La Candelaria.
Many of the boxes carry warnings in
English instead of he required
Colombian ones.
American Tobacco facilitated cigarette smuggling into Colombian, flooding the country with cheap smokes and helping terrorist groups launder drug money, according to investigators and Colombian government officials.


The San Andresito businesses skirt around the fact that so many of their products lack documentation. But, if those products aren't illegal, why are the San Andresito people so up in arms against it?

That cheap camera, pair of jeans or MP3 player may not be so innocent.

By Mike Ceaser, of Bogotá Bike Tours

Friday, December 19, 2014

Slow Times in the San Andresitos

Anti-riot police stand in front of shuttered San Andresito shops along Calle 13.
San Andresitos employees, or customers,
wait outside the shuttered stores.
In what is normally the biggest time of year for the San Andresitos shops, the police cracked down today on these shops along Calle 13 for allegedly selling contraband products.

The San Andresitos, named after Colombia's San Andres archipelago, which has a notorious history of smuggling and piracy, sell imported clothing, electronics and other goods, often of uncertain provenance. Rumor has it that lots of the stuff is imported in exchange for outgoing drugs.

A man, apparently associated with the San Andresitos told us that the police had cracked down on the stores for not paying taxes.

"But if you pay taxes, you can't make any money," he said in disbelief at what the authorities were asking of them.

Frustration...and lost sales.


By Mike Ceaser, of Bogotá Bike Tours