The Star Malaysia

Golden Triangle a troubled spot

UN: Government­s must tackle graft in order to curb the booming meth trade.

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YANGON: “Golden Triangle” countries must address corruption and collaborat­e more closely to tackle record meth production and the gangs who are traffickin­g the drug across South-East Asia and beyond, said the United Nations.

From Bangkok to Brisbane, authoritie­s are raking in huge hauls of methamphet­amine stimulant pills – better known as “yaba” – and the purer, more potent crystallis­ed version known as “ice”.

They hail from the “Golden Triangle”, a lawless wedge of land that intersects China, Laos, Thailand and Myanmar and is the world’s second- largest drug- producing region.

Its drug labs – mainly in Myanmar’s conflict-ridden Shan State – are working overtime, aiding organised crime gangs in their quest for new markets as far away as Australia and Japan.

Worth an estimated US$40bil (RM159.1bil) a year, huge volumes of meth pass through the Golden Triangle, waved through by corrupt law enforcemen­t and border controls.

“Ensuring governance and the rule of law will be crucial to any long-term reduction in drug production and traffickin­g,” said Jeremy Douglas, regional representa­tive of the United Nations Office on Drugs (UNODC) and Crime for South-East Asia and the Pacific.

“To be candid, it also means addressing the corruption, conditions and vulnerabil­ities that allow organised crime to keep expanding operations.”

He was speaking in the Myanmar capital Naypyidaw at a rare regional meeting of police and officials who are aiming to forge a new strategy to fight the drug scourge.

In recent months, several Myanmar soldiers have been arrested with massive caches of yaba, destined for Bangladesh.

Myanmar authoritie­s say they are ready to cooperate with their neigh- bours to stem the flow of drugs and precursor chemicals used by the cook houses in Shan State.

“A top priority for us, is a regional precursor strategy that will slow the supply of chemicals ... into the drug-producing areas of the Golden Triangle,” Myanmar’s Deputy Home Minister Major General Aung Soe said in a statement yesterday.

A surge in supply has seen prices for a single yaba pill plummet to around US$2 (RM7.95) at its cheapest in Thailand and around US$7 (RM27.80) in Singapore, according to UNODC figures, raising fears over addiction rates.

The UN agency also urged regional government­s to address money laundering, share more intelligen­ce on the drug gangs and offer community-based rehabilita­tion for addicts and petty dealers rather than jail.

Ensuring governance and the rule of law will be crucial to any long-term reduction in drug production and traffickin­g. Jeremy Douglas

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