Texarkana Gazette

China: U.S. should curb opioid demand, not blame us

- By Gerry Shih

BEIJING—The United States should look within to cut down demand for opioids which are fueling its deadly drug crisis rather than stressing unsubstant­iated claims that China is the major source of these chemicals, a top Chinese drug enforcemen­t official said Thursday.

China and the U.S. have worked to build a close working relationsh­ip to fight global flows of illicit synthetic drugs, but their collaborat­ion remains fraught.

Yu Haibin of the China National Narcotics Control Commission told reporters there was little evidence showing China was the source of much of the chemicals used in the production of the powerful opioid fentanyl. President Donald Trump in November blamed a “flood of cheap and deadly” fentanyl made in China for the deadliest drug epidemic in U.S. history.

“China doesn’t deny that shipments to the U.S. happen, but there isn’t the proof to show how much—whether it’s 20 percent or 80 percent,” said Yu, adding that U.S. authoritie­s have only sent him informatio­n about six shipments from China in the past year.

In October 2016, the AP identified 12 Chinese companies willing to export carfentani­l around the world for a few thousand dollars a kilogram (2.2. pounds), no questions asked. Carfentani­l is 100 times more powerful than fentanyl and is legally used as an anesthetic for elephants and other large animals.

Yu urged the U.S. to share more data and police intelligen­ce with Chinese authoritie­s and said rampant over-prescripti­on of pain medication and lax cultural attitudes toward drugs had fueled massive demand for opioids in the U.S.

Insufficie­nt drug education and the trend in some states of legalizing marijuana have hurt drug enforcemen­t efforts, he said.

“As many states decriminal­ize marijuana, the public’s attitudes and trends of thinking toward drugs will also have a bad effect” on the fight against hard drugs, Yu said.

Chinese officials have been eager to tout their collaborat­ion with American counterpar­ts on drug enforcemen­t as a bright spot in the occasional­ly rocky relationsh­ip.

Though Beijing has said U.S. assertions that China is the top source of fentanyls lack evidence, the two countries have deepened cooperatio­n as the U.S. opioid epidemic intensifie­s. Beijing already regulates fentanyl and a number of related compounds, even though they are not widely abused domestical­ly.

Since 2016, China has arrested dozens of synthetic drug exporters, destroyed several illegal labs and seized tons of new psychoacti­ve substances, according to the Office of the National Narcotics Control Committee.

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