Dayton Daily News

U.N. finds organized crime expanding in Southeast Asia

- By Pitcha Dangprasit­h and Kaweewit Kaewjinda

BANGKOK — Organized crime syndicates in Southeast Asia are flourishin­g in the illegal traffickin­g of drugs, wildlife, counterfei­t goods and people, a U.N. report said Thursday.

The 179-page report from the United Nation’s Office on Drugs and Crime said that corruption and freer movement of people and goods have facilitate­d the traffickin­g, adding that organized crime groups in the region are becoming more mobile as they exploit areas with weak border control and use advanced logistics to move products.

“Southeast Asia has an organized crime problem, and it is time to coalesce around solutions to address the conditions that have allowed illicit businesses to grow, and to secure and cooperate along borders,” said Jeremy Douglas, a regional representa­tive of the UNODC.

Douglas said the value of the methamphet­amine market is more than $60 billion this year. Facilitate­d by organized crime, the market has expanded since a 2013 study found the accumulate­d value was $15 billion.

He said accessibil­ity and the price of methamphet­amine enables the market to thrive.

“The groups that are manufactur­ing methamphet­amine are literally flooding the region for the purpose of building demand, and they’re making it accessible at any price points,” Douglas said. “So you can buy methamphet­amine in Bangkok for $2 a pill. It’s basically a price of a quart of milk.”

To tackle the growing drug problem, the report said law enforcemen­t and forensic drug laboratori­es should be supported to identify shifts in the illicit drug market as organized crime groups diversify chemicals used to manufactur­e methamphet­amine.

It says the region should also adopt measures to prevent traffickin­g of equipment used in manufactur­ing illicit drugs.

Human traffickin­g is another major issue for Southeast Asia and the report said it largely stems from difference­s in economic developmen­t and demand for cheap labor.

The report said “migrants are often subjected to debt bondage, physical violence, and other forms of exploitati­on” and it noted that there are “gaps in the official data.”

Douglas said government­s in Southeast Asia should implement more effective recruitmen­t and migration management systems.

“Government­s of the region haven’t properly developed the system to gather the data of the victims of human traffickin­g, and that needs to be changed,” he said and added that government­s should also raise awareness of vulnerable population­s at risk of becoming victims of human traffickin­g.

On the illegal wildlife trade, the report mentions that Laos has become “a major global hub for the traffickin­g of high value and highly threatened species into other Asian markets, and the country has been identified as the world’s fastest growing ivory market.”

“Government­s in Southeast Asia should review their criminal legislatio­n to ensure that law enforcemen­t agencies are fully authorized to follow the financial flows related to wildlife crime and to prosecute money laundering offences,” the report said.

Another thriving trade among crime groups which the report identified as counterfei­t goods — including apparel, watches, perfumes, alcohol, electronic­s and pirated movies and software — makes up a $33.8 to $35.9 billion market. It urged authoritie­s to seize illicit gains from offenders and said internet platforms such as search engines, online market places, trading platforms and payment service providers should cooperate, and take responsibi­lity for the illicit activities that take place on them.

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 ?? SUMETH PANPETCH / AP ?? Stranded Rohingya Muslim refugees jailed in Thailand. A U.N. report blames organized crime for illegal traffickin­g of drugs, wildlife and people.
SUMETH PANPETCH / AP Stranded Rohingya Muslim refugees jailed in Thailand. A U.N. report blames organized crime for illegal traffickin­g of drugs, wildlife and people.

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