A huge haul of a drug popular in North America was seized, the first time the synthetic opioid has been seen in Asia’s Golden Triangle.
MYANMAR police say they have seized a huge haul of liquid fentanyl, the first time one of the dangerous synthetic opioids that have ravaged North America has been found in Asia’s Golden Triangle drug-producing region.
In a signal that Asia’s drug syndicates have moved into the lucrative opioid market, anti-narcotics police discovered over 3,700 litres of methylfentanyl near Loikan village in Shan State, northeast Myanmar.
The seizure of the fentanyl derivative was part of Asia’s biggest-ever interception of illicit drugs, precursors and drug-making equipment, including 193 million methamphetamine tablets known as yaba.
At 17.5 tonnes, the yaba almost equalled the amount seized in the previous two years in Myanmar.
The UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said the scale of the bust was unprecedented and that Myanmar’s anti-drug authorities had “dismantled a significant network” during a two-month operation involving police and military.
Also seized were almost 163,000 litres and 35.5 tonnes of drug precursors, as well as weapons. There were more than 130 arrests.
Even so, the methylfentanyl discovery was an ominous indicator for the region’s illicit drug market, the UN agency and a Western official based in Myanmar said.
“It could be a game-changer because fentanyl is so potent that its widespread use would cause a major health concern for Myanmar and the region,” said the Western official, who declined to be identified.
In an interview with Reuters, the head of law enforcement for Myanmar’s counter-narcotics agency, Colonel Zaw Lin, said the methylfentanyl had been verified using stateof-the-art equipment.
The seizure showed that the methods of the drug syndicates were changing, he said.
Fentanyl and its derivatives have caused over 130,000 overdose deaths in the United States and Canada in the past five years, according to government agencies.
The opioid epidemic has not swept Asia, Europe or Australasia, but there have been signs that it is an emerging threat.
“We have repeatedly warned the region that fentanyl could become a problem, but this is off the charts,” said UNODC’s South-East Asia and the Pacific representative Jeremy Douglas.
“It is the shift in the market we have been anticipating and fearing.”