Regional integration being exploited by transnational organized crime, UNODC says
Bangkok (Thailand), 8 November 2013 - Methamphetamine remains the top illicit drug threat in East and Southeast Asia, according to a UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) report released today. Seizures of methamphetamine in both pill and crystalline forms reached record highs there in 2012, with 227 million methamphetamine pills seized - a 60 per cent increase from 2011 and a more-than seven-fold increase since 2008 - along with 11.6 metric tonnes of crystalline methamphetamine, a 12 per cent rise from 2011.
The report, Patterns and Trends of Amphetamine-Type Stimulants (ATS) and Other Drugs - Challenges for Asia and the Pacific 2013, says that methamphetamine is now the first or second most used illicit drug in 13 of the 15 Asia Pacific countries surveyed. The use of methamphetamine increased in Cambodia, China, Japan, Lao PDR, Myanmar, the Republic of Korea, Thailand and Viet Nam.
Transnational organized criminal groups active in the region's illicit drug trade continue to diversify their approach, the Report says. Drug trafficking is dominated by regional syndicates, while groups from Africa and the Islamic Republic of Iran have continued to expand their trafficking of methamphetamine and other drugs into East and Southeast Asia. Indian and South Asian networks are playing an increasing role in smuggling precursor chemicals and pharmaceutical drugs containing precursor chemicals necessary to manufacture methamphetamine in East and Southeast Asia, including Myanmar.
"The worsening illicit drug situation has a domino effect on governance, greatly taxing criminal justice and health systems and threatening human security in countries throughout Asia and the Pacific," said Mr. Jeremy Douglas, UNODC Regional Representative, Southeast Asia and the Pacific, at the report launch today at Bangkok's Foreign Correspondents Club of Thailand (FCCT). "While regional integration positively facilitates the free flow of goods, services, investment, capital and labor, it is also being exploited by transnational organized crime to expand its activities in our region."
Attendees to the launch of report, Patterns and Trends of Amphetamine-Type Stimulants (ATS) and Other Drugs - Challenges for Asia and the Pacific 2013, included representatives of the diplomatic corps, Thai Government and law enforcement partners, international law enforcement, UN agencies and NGOs, and members of the international and local media.
The report was launched by Mr. Justice Tettey, Chief, Laboratory and Scientific Section, UNODC Vienna, Mr. Jeremy Douglas, UNODC Regional Representative, Southeast Asia and the Pacific, and Mr. Tun Nay Soe, Programme Coordination, Global SMART Programme (East Asia), who presented the report's regional data, trends and implications.
Myanmar remains the primary source of methamphetamine pills in East and Southeast Asia, according to the UNODC report, which notes the first-ever dismantling of a crystal methamphetamine laboratory there and the seizure of four pill pressing operations in 2012. Besides Myanmar, large quantities of ATS continue to be manufactured in China, Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines, Cambodia, as well as Australia and New Zealand.
China (102 million pills seized), Thailand (95 million), Myanmar (18 million) and Lao PDR (10 million) accounted for 99 per cent of all methamphetamine pills seized in the region in 2012. Malaysia and Viet Nam also reported "significant increases" in seizures in 2012.
UNODC also notes a resurgence of the 'ecstasy' market in East and Southeast Asia, with ecstasy pill seizures more than tripling in 2012 to over 5.4 million pills from 1.6 million pills seized in 2011.
The Report warns that the neighboring regions of South Asia and the Pacific Island States and Territories are being "targeted" for illicit ATS manufacture and trafficking.
"International drug trafficking groups seek to use South Asia as a major base, given the high availability there of the precursor chemicals necessary to manufacture illicit synthetic drugs," said Mr. Douglas. "They also continue to use the Pacific region as a transit point for trafficking methamphetamines and precursor chemicals to and from Asia."
Background - the Global SMART Programme
The UNODC report, Patterns and Trends of Amphetamine-Type Stimulants and Other Drugs - Challenges for Asia and the Pacific 2013, was produced by the UNODC Global Synthetics Monitoring: Analyses, Reporting and Trends (SMART) Programme.
UNODC launched the Global Synthetics Monitoring: Analyses, Reporting and Trends (SMART) Programme in September 2008. The objective of the Programme is to enhance the capacity of Member States and relevant authorities to generate, manage, analyze, report and use synthetic drug information, in order to design effective, scientifically-sound and evidence-based policies and programmes.
The UNODC Global SMART Programme receives financial support from the Governments of Australia, Canada, Japan, New Zealand, the Republic of Korea, the Russian Federation Thailand, the United Kingdom, and the United States.