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Illegal drug trade hits new high as users total 200m

Jason Burke

The Observer

Sunday 13 Mar 2005

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Runaway demand around the globe puts more money into the hands of
traffickers despite action to curb supply


The global drug trade is booming, fuelled by the demand from more than 200
million people worldwide who used illegal narcotics last year, new reports
show.

According to an as-yet-unpublished UN report, despite multi-billion-pound
anti-drug measures that have restricted some supplies, the market is as
insatiable as ever.

'We have shown that drugs control policies can work in terms of supply -
but demand is a very different matter,' a spokesperson from the UN's Office
on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) told The Observer .

A second new report, issued by the US State Department, confirms the UN
picture of a world using more drugs than ever. Though narcotic use has
stabilised in North America, the world's biggest single market, it has
boomed in south-east Asia and Australasia, where use of amphetamine-type
stimulants, many manufactured in China, has rocketed.

South America, Africa and the Caribbean have also seen serious drug
problems emerging. In Europe, though the rapid rise of cocaine use has
slowed, an estimated 5.3 per cent of the population used cannabis in the
past year and heroin and crack use is still increasing in many regions.

Antonio da Costa, director of the UNODC, said global demand reduction
measures in recent years had been 'lacklustre [and] uninspiring'. In 2001
the office estimated that around 180 million people used drugs in the
world. The number is now thought to have increased more than 10 per cent to
about 3.5 per cent of the total global population.

The results will disappoint campaigners and administrators who have
struggled for years against one of the world's biggest industries and will
fuel fears that the 'war on terror' has distracted from efforts to restrict
the production and use of narcotics.

'There has been a lot of effort, but has the world suddenly said: "Ooh, we
don't like drugs"? No, nor is it likely to in the near future,' said Harry
Shapiro, of the British charity Drugscope. A UNODC spokesmen admitted that
drugs had dropped down the international agenda after 9/11 and the
subsequent focus on radical Islam. 'There is not the interest these days,'
the spokesperson said. 'People seem to have dropped the ball.'

One of the biggest problems has been the explosion of amphetamine-type
drugs, especially in the Far East where their use is becoming endemic.

Such drugs are now 'a global phenomenon', says Koli Kouame, of the
International Narcotics Control Board, another UN body. 'This is a very
contagious phenomenon among the youth,' Kouame said.

The American report shows that demand for drugs has increased in more than
three quarters of some 150 countries surveyed.

A number of states have recorded surprising consumption levels - Israelis
are said to use 100 tonnes of marijuana, 20 tonnes of hashish, 20 million
tablets of ecstasy, four tonnes of heroin, three tonnes of cocaine, and
hundreds of thousands of LSD blotters annually.

In Lithuania, there has been a boom in abuse of methadone-type artificial
heroin substitutes, while the number of registered heroin addicts in
Belarus has doubled. In Finland and Estonia, surveys show an increasing
appetite among young people for amphetamine-type stimulants. There have
even been drug busts in Iraq - where traffickers have taken advantage of
post-invasion chaos to traffic hashish - and in Syria.

'It just goes to show that whatever the penalties - hanging, imprisonment,
chopping off hands - there will always be someone who is prepared to
traffic, distribute or use drugs,' said Shapiro.

Robert Charles, the American official in charge of Washington's fight
against drugs, has been keen to stress the positive.

'The metrics, I think, are beginning to bear out a degree of real success
in counter-narcotics and money laundering,' Charles said last week.
'Winning the drug war does not mean that we sort of roll up all bad guys
and all future bad guys and ... go home and do something else. It means
that we make steady progress in reducing these threats to our security'.

The major achievements, according to Charles, are significant reductions in
cocaine production in South America, especially in Colombia, and of opium
in the Far East.

However, all drugs experts agree that the massive opium harvests in
Afghanistan dominate the landscape. The UNODC hopes that the sheer size of
last year's crop - 4,200 tonnes - will mean less being planted in coming
years, as a glut brings down prices.

However, the cheap drugs are already having an impact. According to da
Costa, 30 countries reported a rise in heroin use since 2003, 25 were
stable - and only 18 reported a decrease.



 

 

 

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