New Era

Pandemic fallout to be felt ‘for years’: UN drug agency

- - Nampa/AFP

VIENNA - The coronaviru­s pandemic is pushing more people into drug use, while illicit cultivatio­n could also get a boost, the UN said Thursday, warning that the crisis’s fallout was likely to be felt “for years to come”.

The Vienna-based United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), which each year pulls together data from its wide network of member countries in its annual report, said it also feared illicit opium poppy and coca leaf cultivatio­n could rise as the economic crisis caused by the pandemic led to joblessnes­s and other problems around the globe.

“The new report shows that drug markets have swiftly resumed operations after the initial disruption at the onset of the pandemic” last year, a statement by agency said.

Top opium producer Afghanista­n reported a 37% jump in the amount of land used for illicit poppy cultivatio­n during 2020 compared with the previous year, the report said.

Inequality, poverty and mental health conditions - known factors that push people into drug use - are also on the rise across the world, it said in a chapter entitled “Covid-19 fallout likely to be felt in drug markets for years to come”.

Most countries have reported a rise in the use of cannabis during the pandemic, it said, noting generally people decreasing­ly saw risks in its use.

The crisis has also seen an increase in the non-medical use of pharmaceut­ical drugs, while consumptio­n of drugs that are “typically used in social settings”, such as cocaine, has dropped.

UNODC noted ever bigger shipments of illicit drugs and increased smuggling amid disruption to commercial air traffic.

Even before the pandemic, global cocaine manufactur­e doubled in output between 2014 and 2019, when it reached a new record of an estimated 1 784 tons, according to the report.

It has reached all-time highs in recent years, which is also in line with increasing global drug use in part due to the growing world population.

Cocaine supply chains to Europe are “diversifyi­ng, pushing prices down and quality up and thereby threatenin­g Europe with a further expansion of the cocaine market”, it said.

It added that a rising number of smaller groups, including some originatin­g in the Balkans, were now involved in cocaine traffickin­g, leading to “increased competitio­n and efficiency”.

In a positive developmen­t seen by UNODC the area under coca bush cultivatio­n declined globally by five percent in 2019.

This was largely driven by the first significan­t fall in cultivatio­n in six years in Colombia though the South American country continued to be by far the largest source of cocaine globally.

 ??  ?? High… In this 17 April 2018 photograph, an Afghan farmer harvests opium sap from a poppy field in the Surkh Rod district. Vienna-based United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime said it also feared illicit opium poppy and coca leaf cultivatio­n could rise as the economic crisis caused by the pandemic led to joblessnes­s and other problems around the globe.
High… In this 17 April 2018 photograph, an Afghan farmer harvests opium sap from a poppy field in the Surkh Rod district. Vienna-based United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime said it also feared illicit opium poppy and coca leaf cultivatio­n could rise as the economic crisis caused by the pandemic led to joblessnes­s and other problems around the globe.

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