Amphetamine Use On Rise In Asia, Mideast
U.N.: Manufacturing And Trafficking Of Illegal Synthetic Stimulants Becoming More Sophisticated
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Seven kilograms of amphetamines were seized at Kansai International Airport from a doctored carry-on suitcase of a Canadian woman who arrived at the airport on April 10 on a flight from Vancouver, police said May 2. (Kyodo via AP Images)
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Manufacturing and trafficking of illegal stimulants is also getting more sophisticated, the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime said in a 2008 assessment that pointed to the growing involvement of local and international crime syndicates.
Antonio Maria Costa, executive director of the U.N. agency, warned that amphetamine-type drugs are seen as "a cheap and available tonic for our fast and competitive times."
In North America and Europe, where pill-popping is largely recreational, demand has leveled off or even declined in recent years thanks to effective controls on the chemicals used to make them.
But in fast-growing developing countries, where the drugs are often used to boost stamina on assembly lines or to keep drivers awake behind the wheel, use is on the rise.
"The problem has shifted to new markets over the past few years," the U.N. report said, adding that, even so, production appears to have stabilized worldwide at about 551 tons (500 metric tons) annually.
The market, retail and wholesale, also has remained steady at around $65 billion since 2001.
Asia is still driving demand, with nearly half the region's countries reporting increases in methamphetamine use.
But the most dramatic shift has been in the Middle East, where seizures of amphetamine-type stimulants accounted for a staggering 25 percent of the global total in 2005-2006, up from just 1 percent in 2000-2001, the U.N. said.
The largest market in that region was Saudi Arabia, a trend apparently linked in part to a growing number of migrant workers, with more than 12 tons (11 metric tons) of amphetamines seized two years ago.
The surge in Middle East busts has resulted in a sharp drop in the global share of seizures in East and Southeast Asia, home to the most amphetamine users in real numbers, with its percentage of total seizures more than halving from 67 to 31 during the same period.
But there have been worrying changes in the type and scale of production in that region.
"A decade ago, synthetic drugs were a cottage industry," said Costa, pointing to recent seizures of industrial-sized clandestine laboratories.
A decade ago, synthetic drugs were a cottage industry. Now they are big business.
Antonio Maria Costaexecutive director, UNODC
Countries where law enforcement is weak or where local officials are complicit are most selected as bases for such operations.
Europe, a longtime supplier of Ecstasy to global markets, meanwhile, continues to be the major source of that drug trafficked internationally, but its importance is diminishing as manufacturers shift to regions closer to their consumer markets, the U.N. said.
Clandestine labs are being discovered in Mexico and Canada, for instance, where they can readily supply users in the United States, and labs have also been found in Turkey and Bulgaria, the source of many of the drugs that end up in the Middle East.
Suppliers can quickly adapt to trends and cater to local markets because, unlike plant-based drugs such as cocaine or heroin, ingredients needed to make synthetics are readily available for legitimate industrial purposes.
"When one lab is shut, another opens," Costa said. "When one type of precursor chemical is unavailable, producers switch to an alternative."
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- If the Middle Easterners are Speed Freaks there will be no war on terror. They will be to busy stealing selling anything they can to support the habit!!!
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- Boy, talk about a growing economy. Funny, there was another story today that US exports were on the rise. Coincidence?
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- ummm...you think they won''''t drive just because they do not carry a valid license? People do it all the time, being in an irrational state just makes them fearless --------------------------------------------------------------------------------Posted by sbbm
Right, that''s the same stuff Japanese gave their fighter pilots before sending them to suicide missions. - Reply to this comment
- THIER DRIVERS LICENSE SHOULD BE REVOKED AND WE SHOULD LET THEM HAVE ALL THEY WANT THEY CANT HOLD UP LONG WITH THE STRENGTH OF THE DRUGS MADE TODAY.MOST OF THE USERS WOULD RATHER BURN OUT THAN FADE AWAY.
Posted by tootall10142 at 09:09 AM : Sep 09, 2008
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Revoking Driver''s licenses doesn''t work. My wife was involved in an accident with a man; no insurance, no license, no green card or other ID. Cops didn''t write a ticket or arrest. Why? because, "If we are handed a bench warrant when he doesn''t show up in court we can''t be sure we have a valid address. We can''t arrest him for a minor traffic offense. We need to be able to prove he is here illegally before we can turn him over to immigration."
So the long and short of it all was I and my insurance have to pay for the damage he did to my vehicle. - Reply to this comment
- You need to be on something to live in this crazy world. People will not sell me drugs because they think im crazy enough as is.
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- I could send them pics of long time meth users in Kentucky. Maybe it would sink in.
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- Meth,speed,crank users = Zombies.
- Reply to this comment
- THIER DRIVERS LICENSE SHOULD BE REVOKED AND WE SHOULD LET THEM HAVE ALL THEY WANT THEY CANT HOLD UP LONG WITH THE STRENGTH OF THE DRUGS MADE TODAY.MOST OF THE USERS WOULD RATHER BURN OUT THAN FADE AWAY.
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- The above title, "Amphetamine Use On Rise In Asia, Mideast"
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Oh great. All we need now is hyped and wired Asian martial artists running around the globe.
Maybe someone should start an educational movement telling these people how long-tewrm crank use will ruin their vision and rot their teeth. - Reply to this comment
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




