The Herald (South Africa)

China jails nine for fentanyl dealing

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China on Thursday jailed nine people, one with a suspended death sentence, for illegally selling fentanyl to US buyers, the result of a joint investigat­ion over a drug that has killed thousands of Americans.

The US has long accused China of being the main source of the deadly opioid, with President Donald Trump charging in August that Beijing had reneged on its promise to crack down on the drug.

Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that US authoritie­s blame for more than 100 deaths a day in the US.

The court in northern Hebei province described the case as the first successful joint probe related to fentanyl smuggling.

China’s narcotics bureau discovered in 2017 a criminal ring based in Shanghai and eastern Jiangsu province and seized 11.9kg of fentanyl, acting on a tipoff from US border authoritie­s, the court said.

Of the nine people jailed in Hebei, one was given a death sentence with a two-year reprieve while two others received life terms for traffickin­g fentanyl and alprazolam — the popular prescripti­on anxiety drug branded as Xanax.

All three were “lured by high profit and huge demand” from US buyers, the Xingtai Intermedia­te

People’s Court said.

The sentencing comes amid ongoing negotiatio­ns over a potential US-China deal after more than a year of trade conflict between the two countries, of which fentanyl has been a sticking point.

The drug had previously often slipped past law enforcemen­t due in part to the ability of drug makers to tweak formulas and create fentanyl analogues not restricted by existing Chinese law.

China in May began designatin­g all fentanyl analogues as controlled substances in an effort to prevent this.

Neverthele­ss, Trump announced new tariffs on China over the summer as a response to what he saw as China’s continued failure to stem the flow of fentanyl into the US.

The two countries have since pledged to work together to fight the proliferat­ion of the drug, though Beijing has rejected responsibi­lity for the US addiction crisis.

The White House’s “drug tsar”, Jim Carroll, said after meetings with Chinese officials in September that the two countries had pledged full cooperatio­n against fentanyl, and he was convinced that Beijing was committed to going after trafficker­s.

 ?? Picture: CHINA NATIONAL NARCOTICS CONTROL COMMISSION VIA REUTERS ?? DRUG CRACKDOWN: People charged with smuggling fentanyl to the US stand during sentencing in Xingtai, Hebei province, China, on Thursday
Picture: CHINA NATIONAL NARCOTICS CONTROL COMMISSION VIA REUTERS DRUG CRACKDOWN: People charged with smuggling fentanyl to the US stand during sentencing in Xingtai, Hebei province, China, on Thursday

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