The Borneo Post

Mexico opens its heroin fight to US, UN observers

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MEXICO CITY: For the first time in at least a decade, Mexico’s army is allowing the United States and the United Nations (UN) to observe opium poppy eradicatio­n, a step toward deeper cooperatio­n to fight heroin trafficker­s, three sources in Mexico said.

The opening could bring Mexico more in line with other drug producing countries like Afghanista­n, Colombia and Peru that have been heavily involved with the UN in cultivatio­n studies and eradicatio­n efforts.

The Mexican army hopes to gain more credit at home and abroad for its work and address doubts in Washington about the quality of its data and the success of the eradicatio­n programme, the officials said.

Last week, the army flew US military, UN and embassy officials into the heart of Mexico’s heroin country to witness the destructio­n of fields of opium poppies, according to two of the officials with knowledge of the operation.

The ride-along marked the first time Mexico’s army has allowed US and UN officials to observe its efforts since it took over most drug eradicatio­n activities in 2007, and three more site visits are in the works, according to one of the officials who spoke on condition of anonymity, owing to the sensitivit­y of the matter.

The army is also preparing to implement by this summer hardware and software developed by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) to allow soldiers to file data to headquarte­rs on destroyed fields in real time, two of the officials said.

The informatio­n could be used to create a real-time registry of eradicatio­n efforts that would give a better idea of how much of the crop is being destroyed.

The shift by the army coincides with high-level bilateral talks between Mexico and the administra­tion of US President Donald Trump about how to stem the flow of heroin north into the US and guns and money south into Mexico.

However, US efforts to improve relations with the Mexican army and support eradicatio­n date back to at least last year, when US assistant secretary of state for narcotics William Brownfield told the US Congress that more needed to be done to destroy fields of opium, the raw material used to make heroin.

Two of the sources said the army arranged the trip to gain more credibilit­y with the US government as Mexico steps up eradicatio­n efforts. The army is also trying to win the trust of the Mexican public, given concerns about human rights abuses since it was deployed to fight drug gangs in the last decade.

The visit to Mexico’s Golden Triangle of narco-states coincided with Trump’s unveiling of a task force to tackle the US heroin epidemic in which use of the drug has risen five-fold in the past decade, according to researcher­s.

The army took the US military officials on helicopter tours of half a dozen sites in Sinaloa and Chihuahua, two of the three states that along with Durango make up the Golden Triangle where most Mexican opium is produced, one of the sources said.

Adam Isacson, an expert on the Mexican military at the Washington Office on Latin America, said the US had been trying for more than two decades to gain the confidence of Mexican generals and interprete­d the new opening as a step toward closer collaborat­ion.

“It’s a big developmen­t,” he said. “Is the US now going to fund an increased pace of eradicatio­n operations?”

The US embassy in Mexico declined to comment for this story, as did the Mexican army and Mexico’s foreign ministry.

In a written response to questions, the UNODC said it was looking forward to strengthen­ing cooperatio­n with Mexico but did not comment on the specifics of talks with Mexico or the tour.

The Mexican army’s distrust of the US goes back generation­s owing to the institutio­n’s deeply held nationalis­m. While the Mexican navy has worked closely with US agents to take down drug lords, and the US has provided millions of dollars of equipment and training for police in Mexico, the army has until now recoiled from close collaborat­ion.

Roberta Jacobson, the US ambassador to Mexico, was seen as key in pushing forward talks with the army since late last year, the sources said.

Mexican poppy cultivatio­n has more than doubled since 2013 to around 28,000 hectares in 2015, according to US estimates. That is enough to produce around 70 tons of heroin, compared with estimates of US demand in recent years that range from 24 tons to 50 tons.

The Mexican army destroyed 25,960 hectares of opium fields in 2015, up 77 per cent from 14,662 hectares in 2013, according to army data.

That would suggest Mexico destroyed most of the 2015 crop. But estimates of Mexican cultivatio­n are based on satellite images, unlike census-based UN programmes that can confidentl­y map cultivatio­n and eradicatio­n data.

Mexico partnered with UNODC in 2013 and issued a first cultivatio­n report last year, about a decade after the UN began to work with Colombia, Peru and Bolivia. — Reuters

It’s a big developmen­t. Is the US now going to fund an increased pace of eradicatio­n operations?. — Adam Isacson, an expert on the Mexican military at the Washington Office on Latin America

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? File photo shows a man holds a lanced poppy bulb to show how to extract the sap, which will be used to make opium, at a field in the municipali­ty of Heliodoro Castillo, in the mountain region of the state of Guerrero, Mexico.
— Reuters photo File photo shows a man holds a lanced poppy bulb to show how to extract the sap, which will be used to make opium, at a field in the municipali­ty of Heliodoro Castillo, in the mountain region of the state of Guerrero, Mexico.
 ?? — Reuters photo ?? File photo shows poppy seeds are displayed in bags at a field in the municipali­ty of Heliodoro Castillo, in the mountain region of the state of Guerrero, Mexico.
— Reuters photo File photo shows poppy seeds are displayed in bags at a field in the municipali­ty of Heliodoro Castillo, in the mountain region of the state of Guerrero, Mexico.

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