The Golden Triangle, an area encircled by Myanmar, Thailand and
Laos, is a major area of concern for Chinese law enforcement
authorities. More than 95 percent of China's heroin supplies are
produced in and smuggled through the Golden Triangle.
Fierce crackdowns by police and a plant replacement scheme have
reduced poppy planting and processing operations to some extent.
Since the late 1990s, coffee, castor beans, cassava, rubber and tea
have been used to replace poppy plantations. After 10 years, these
substitutes are beginning to generate profits, giving local farmers
a viable alternative to growing poppy.
One mu (667 square meters) of poppy yields about one kilogram of
opium a year, which could be sold for 1,800 yuan (US$224), enough
to feed a rural family of six. But these days, growing poppy is no
more profitable than growing tea. One mu of tea could earn 4,000
yuan this year if weather conditions permit.
As a result of the plant replacement scheme, the raw materials
for drugs such as heroin have become increasingly harder to come by
and more expensive, thereby affecting their street value. A kilo of
heroin, 90 percent purity, reportedly sells for 20,000-plus yuan in
Laos, 60,000 yuan in Vietnam, 80,000 yuan at the China-Vietnam
border, and up to 90,000-100,000 yuan in south China's Guangdong Province.
In addition to price, authorities have noticed a change in
consumption habits. According to statistics from international
anti-drug agencies, the sale of new types of narcotics such as
synthetic drugs like Ecstasy has increased in tandem with a
decrease in the supply of traditional drugs like heroin, cocaine
and cannabis.
According to China's State Anti-drug Committee, mainland customs
cracked 23 cases of synthetic narcotics trafficking in the first
quarter of this year, accounting for half of all drugs smuggling
cases. The seized narcotics, weighing a total of 48.7 kg, included
methamphetamine (also known as ice or crystal meth), ketamine and
Ecstasy.
However, drug traffickers have dealt authorities another
challenge; they are bypassing the need for physical smuggling
through the use of the Internet, International Herald Leader
reported on May 23.
More and more synthetic narcotics are being produced in homes,
which is a result of manufacturing and processing technology being
transmitted electronically via the Internet from bases in the
Golden Triangle.
This year, local police seized 130 kg of synthetic drugs in
south China's Guangxi in the first three months alone. A man
named Xiao Chunfeng was found to have produced nearly 100 kg of
ice, in his backyard, so to speak, according to local police.
Liang Yiling, an expert who has been engaged in collecting drug
sales information for many years, said that the chemicals needed to
make synthetic drugs are readily available.
For example, green tea polyphenol, which can be processed to
make caffeine, is not classified as a controlled substance
because it's commonly used in soft drinks and medicines. Tea
polyphenol is also one of the main ingredients of ice.
With 60,000 yuan worth of tea polyphenol, Xiao Chunfeng produced
10,000 pills of ice, with a wholesale price of up to 280,000
yuan.
Processing techniques aside, sales channels have also opened up
on the Internet. Liang said that drug dealers even manage
money-back guarantees, ingredients supply and money laundering
services online.
Many of the deals are now done without any personal or physical
contact, which has made it harder for authorities to trace and
investigate cases.
"The traditional modes of drug dealing have changed greatly," Li
Boping, a senior detective, said, adding that there should be a
more stringent management of the Internet by international
enforcement agencies and also tighter controls on chemicals that
can be used to manufacture synthetic drugs.
(Source: International Herald Leader, translated by
Wang Zhiyong for China.org.cn, June 4, 2006)