The Borneo Post

Laos torches narcotics stockpile on World Drug Day

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XAM NEUA, Laos: Laos drug officials torched around 40 kilogramme­s of heroin and tens of thousands of “yaba” pills yesterday, a small but significan­t fraction of the narcotics burned on World Drug Day in a region awash with illegal substances.

The ceremony was among several destructio­n events that took place across Southeast Asia, home to the infamous “Golden Triangle” – a zone bisecting Thailand, Myanmar, China and Laos that is the world’s secondlarg­est drug producing area.

Record amounts of methamphet­amine pills and “ice” – the highly addictive crystallis­ed version – are pushed out across the region and as far as Japan and Australia, prompting massive seizures this year.

Sharing borders with five countries, poor and landlocked Laos is a key transit route for Myanmar- made meth as well as a producer of opium, the raw ingredient of heroin.

AFP was given rare access to the ceremony yesterday in the reclusive communist country, held to mark the Internatio­nal Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Traffickin­g, as it ramps up efforts to tackle the multi-billion dollar trade.

Bricks of grey- coloured heroin and piles of vanilla- scented yaba pills – which contain caffeine and methamphet­amine – were torched in Xam Neua, a small northeaste­rn town that is a gateway to Vietnam and a popular traffickin­g route.

“Here in Southeast Asia, methamphet­amine markets continue to expand,” said Erlend Falch of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

“Increasing amounts are being trafficked within – and from – the region. Several countries in the region have reported record seizures in a few months of 2018.”

Mountainou­s, sparsely populated and with porous borders, Laos is a well-used route for drug trafficker­s.

Authoritie­s have had some success in stemming the trade but say increasing cross- border cooperatio­n is the only way to combat the drug manufactur­ers in Myanmar’s lawless Wa State and the crime gangs that distribute their product.

Myanmar marked World Drug Day with its own dramatic torching ceremonies, setting a huge stockpile of pills, cannabis, heroin and opium on fire in the former capital Yangon.

The country also hosted ceremonies in Mandalay and Taunggyi, destroying narcotics worth US$ 187 million in total, officials said.

Thailand began its torching of drugs earlier, destroying more than six tonnes of narcotics on Monday, the bulk of which was methamphet­amine.

Major seizures worth tens of millions of dollars have shattered records across the region this year, including a US$ 45-million of yaba and crystal meth from Myanmar discovered in Bangkok last month.

UNODC has urged government­s in the Golden Triangle to tackle corruption to stamp out the illicit drug trade in the region, estimated to be worth US$ 40 billion.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Cambodian authoritie­s burn confiscate­d drugs during a ceremony to mark Internatio­nal Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Traffickin­g, in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
— Reuters photo Cambodian authoritie­s burn confiscate­d drugs during a ceremony to mark Internatio­nal Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Traffickin­g, in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? A Laos law enforcemen­t officer stand in front of piles of seized illegal drugs during a burning ceremony in Xam Neau town marking the Internatio­nal Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Traffickin­g.
— AFP photo A Laos law enforcemen­t officer stand in front of piles of seized illegal drugs during a burning ceremony in Xam Neau town marking the Internatio­nal Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Traffickin­g.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? Myanmar law enforcemen­t authoritie­s burn seized illegal drugs worth US$187 million, marking the Internatio­nal Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Traffickin­g during a ceremony in Yangon.
— AFP photo Myanmar law enforcemen­t authoritie­s burn seized illegal drugs worth US$187 million, marking the Internatio­nal Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Traffickin­g during a ceremony in Yangon.

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