The Phnom Penh Post

Porous borders let drugs pass: UN

- Andrew Nachemson

A UNITED Nations drug taskforce reported yesterday that traffickin­g is still rampant across the porous borders of Southeast Asia’s East-West Economic Corridor, citing a want of resources and lack of cooperatio­n between government­s and domestic agencies.

“Preliminar­y findings show that in addition to gaps in interdicti­on capacities at formal border crossings, informal crossings are also numerous,” the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime stated in a press release. UNODC completed a weeklong assessment in border areas in Vietnam, Laos, Thailand and Myanmar in cooperatio­n with local authoritie­s. A Cambodian delegation attended the assessment as “a proactive observer”, offering recommenda­tions and future cooperatio­n.

Cambodian authoritie­s have long maintained that the influx of drugs to the Kingdom is a result of traffickin­g from other countries, particular­ly from the Golden Triangle of Laos, Myanmar and Thailand.

“A primary aim of the series of assessment­s was to pinpoint pertinent traffickin­g routes, and allocate more resources accordingl­y,” said UNODC regional adviser Chandu Bandhari.

He also said a lack of coopera- tion is holding the region back.

Last week, the UNODC also held a training workshop in Phnom Penh, focusing on community based and voluntary treatment. Cambodia has long been criticised for forced detention of drug users in prison-like “rehabilita­tion centres”, and the head of the country’s anti-drug unit recently suggested bypassing the judicial system entirely.

“There is a need to increase the enrolment of patients at the community level and voluntaril­y. For this there is a need to increase the quality of treatment,” said Olivier Lermet who headed the workshop, adding that voluntary treatment “simply works better than confinemen­t”.

 ?? FACEBOOK ?? CMAC director-general Heng Ratana inspects officials and dogs that are slated to be sent on a mission to Israel.
FACEBOOK CMAC director-general Heng Ratana inspects officials and dogs that are slated to be sent on a mission to Israel.

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