The Philippine Star

UN: Meth seizures quadruple across much of Asia-Pacific

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BANGKOK (AFP) — Methamphet­amine seizures across much of the Asia- Pacific region have quadrupled over five years, the UN said yesterday, citing rising wealth as one reason for a boom in production and consumptio­n.

Growing economic integratio­n across the region was also enabling cross- border criminal networks to cooperate in peddling amphetamin­e-type stimulants and so-called “legal highs,” the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said in a report.

The study, which was released in Bangkok, covers Southeast Asia, East Asia and Oceania, but excluded South Asia.

Between 2008 and 2013, the last year covered by the UNODC figures, regional seizures of methamphet­amine — known colloquial­ly as meth — rose nearly four-fold from 11 to 42 metric tonnes.

Much of the increase is down to an explosion in production of meth tablets, known in parts of Asia as “yaba.”

The drug, a potent stimulant, tends to come in two forms, a powerful crystallin­e variant known as “ice” or crystal meth, and the usually less pure tablets.

Between 2008 and 2013 crystal meth seizures doubled, from seven to around 14 tons.

But meth tablet seizures grew eight fold, from 30 million tablets in 2008 to more than 250 million in 2013.

Long popular in the poorer Mekong region countries of Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam as an affordable high — often for people working long hours such as truck drivers — yaba is finding new consumers in wealthier countries.

South Korea, Malaysia and Singapore have all reported recent seizures of meth tablets, the UNODC said, although it is thought intended customers are likely to be labourers from the Mekong region rather than locals.

“This significan­t increase of seizures might partly be the result of effective law enforcemen­t measures, “the study said.

But the rise “also points to expanding manufactur­e and an increase of traffickin­g to and through the region as the synthetic drug market is becoming increasing­ly interconne­cted with other regions.”

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