Cape Times

A global struggle

-

AS CHINA marked Internatio­nal Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Traffickin­g on Tuesday by burning seized drugs and announcing the executions of some drug trafficker­s, there is no denying that despite the positive results of their crackdown, the authoritie­s still face a serious challenge in the fight against drugs.

In its annual drug report released on Monday, the authoritie­s say police seized 89.2 metric tons of drugs last year, an increase of nearly 9 percent from 2016, while the number of known drug users in the country rose by nearly 2 percent in 2017 to 2.55 million.

New challenges have emerged in the antinarcot­ics drive, including the internet as a channel for selling drugs, gangs increasing­ly using the express delivery companies to transport drugs, and the emergence of new drugs – including those made of non-controlled chemicals – which can be hundreds of times more potent than traditiona­l drugs.

The National Narcotics Laboratory said 34 new types of psychoacti­ve substances were introduced in 2017, bringing the total number to 230 nationwide.

China has some of the harshest drug laws in the world, with the manufactur­ing or selling of illicit drugs designated a capital crime. And several measures have been taken to raise awareness of the antidrug fight, including providing anti-drug education in communitie­s and rural areas, as well as releasing informatio­n about anti-drug work via new media.

As a victim that is facing an increased threat of drug inflows from the so-called Golden Triangle and Golden Crescent regions in South-East and Central Asia, China knows only too well that illicit drugs are closely intertwine­d with internatio­nal terrorism and other organised transnatio­nal crimes, and that no country can effectivel­y deal with this scourge alone.

That is why Beijing has called for a global struggle against narcotics-related crimes that transcends political difference­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa