Bangkok Post

Collaborat­ion key to solving meth trade

Golden Triangle crackdown urged

-

YANGON: “Golden Triangle” countries must address corruption and collaborat­e more closely to tackle record meth production and the gangs who traffick the drug across Southeast Asia and beyond, the UN said yesterday.

From Bangkok to Brisbane, authoritie­s are raking in huge hauls of methamphet­amine stimulant pills — better known as yaba — and the purer, more potent crystallis­ed version known as “ice”.

They hail from the “Golden Triangle”, a lawless wedge of land that intersects China, Laos, Thailand and Myanmar and is the world’s second-largest drug-producing region.

Its drug labs — mainly in Myanmar’s conflict-ridden Shan State — are working overtime, aiding organised crime gangs in their quest for new markets as far away as Australia and Japan.

Worth an estimated US $40 billion a year (about 1.3 trillion baht), huge volumes of meth pass through the Golden Triangle, waved through by corrupt law enforcemen­t and border controls.

“Ensuring governance and the rule of law will be crucial to any long-term reduction in drug production and traffickin­g,” said Jeremy Douglas, regional representa­tive of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime for Southeast Asia and the Pacific.

“To be candid, it also means addressing the corruption, conditions and vulnerabil­ities that allow organised crime to keep expanding operations.”

He was speaking in the Myanmar’s capital Nay Pyi Taw at a rare regional meeting of police and officials who are aiming to forge a new strategy to fight the drug scourge.

In recent months several of Myanmar’s soldiers have been arrested with massive caches of yaba, destined for Bangladesh.

Myanmar’s authoritie­s say they are ready to cooperate with their neighbours to stem the flow of drugs and precursor chemicals used by the cook houses in Shan State.

“A top priority for us, is a regional precursor strategy that will slow the supply of chemicals... into the drug-producing areas of the Golden Triangle,” Myanmar’s Deputy Home Minister Major General Aung Soe said in a statement.

A surge in supply has seen prices for a single yaba pill plummet to around $2 at its cheapest in Thailand and around $7 in Singapore, according to UNODC figures, raising fears over addiction rates.

The UN agency also urged regional government­s to address money laundering, share more intelligen­ce on the drug gangs and offer rehabilita­tion for addicts and dealers rather than jail.

 ?? AFP ?? A Bangladesh­i Border Guard (BGB) lays out small bags of the drug ‘yaba’ recovered from a passenger bus in a search at a checkpost along the Teknaf-Cox’s Bazar highway in April.
AFP A Bangladesh­i Border Guard (BGB) lays out small bags of the drug ‘yaba’ recovered from a passenger bus in a search at a checkpost along the Teknaf-Cox’s Bazar highway in April.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand