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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
INTERNATIONAL NARCOTICS CONTROL STRATEGY REPORT, MARCH 1996: SWEDEN
United States Department of State
Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs
I. Summary
Sweden is not a principal site for illicit drug production or
trafficking. Swedish authorities have expressed concern about the
increasing amounts of amphetamines entering Sweden from Holland and
Poland. The diversion of precursor and essential chemicals and money
laundering activity remain relatively minor problems.
II. Status of Country
After a failed experiment with drug liberalization in the 1960s, Sweden
has pursued a very restrictive policy towards illicit drugs.
Amphetamines and cannabis/hashish are the most frequently abused drugs.
In 1995, amphetamine seizures surpassed cannabis/hashish seizures for
the second year in a row. Smaller quantities of heroin and LSD are also
used. The Government of Sweden (GOS) follows a strict counter-narcotics
approach in drug control programs and the Swedish National Institute for
Public Health advocates a healthy lifestyle to prevent drug abuse; it
also subsidizes drug use prevention programs in the private sector. The
latest GOS study, published in 1993, indicated that there were 14,000-
20,000 daily drug users in Sweden in 1992 (about 2% of the total
population). Swedish authorities believe this number has not changed
significantly.
The GOS monitors imports and exports of all precursor and essential
chemicals. The Swedish Medical Products Agency is responsible for
precursor and essential chemical controls.
Money laundering is a crime under Swedish law, which requires banks and
other financial institutions to identify new customers and register
large currency transactions with the Swedish Central Bank. Swedish law
also provides for the seizure of assets derived from drug-related
activity. The Swedish police have established a "National Financial
Intelligence Service" unit to enforce these laws.
III. Country Actions Against Drugs in 1995
Policy Initiatives. The Swedish police maintain a cooperative, informal
relationship with authorities in many countries to control drug
smuggling. Swedish customs officials train Baltic authorities in drug
trafficking intelligence work. An ongoing program started in 1993
allocates USD 8.5 million over a three-year period to a project for
Swedish police and customs officials to assist Baltic nations in
building criminal surveillance centers.
Sweden participates in a number of international anti-drug fora,
including the UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs, the UN Drug Control
Program (UNDCP), and the Dublin Group. In the Spring of 1995, Sweden
initiated a study on UNDCP reform. In late-1995, conclusions were
published which identified a number of problems and proposed reforms.
In 1996, Sweden plans to engage a number of other countries in the
reform process and has set aside almost $1 million to fund seminars and
other reform-related efforts. According to UNDCP, Sweden pledged
approximately $6 million in FY95 contributions to the UNDCP, making it
the second largest single donor. In 1995, Sweden also contributed about
$1 million to the UN World Health Organization's substance abuse
program."European Cities Against Drugs," an alliance of major cities
that espouses zero tolerance policies, is a growing Europe-wide movement
founded in Sweden in 1994. The alliance maintains its Secretariat in
Stockholm.
Accomplishments. With its accession to the EU on January 1, 1995,
Sweden began a closer, more formal collaboration with law enforcement
and judicial authorities of its EU partners. Accordingly, the GOS
passed police and customs controls legislation in 1995. Swedish customs
officers continue to patrol Sweden's borders with EU countries and to
inspect persons and goods when they have reason. However, with EU
accession, Sweden downsized its force of customs officers by 750
positions, a reduction of 25%.
In 1995, a Swedish customs official was assigned to Moscow. Swedish
police and customs drug liaison officers have been resident in The
Hague, Bangkok, Athens, Copenhagen, Lisbon, London, Warsaw, Tallinn,
Riga, Bonn, and Budapest. Sweden has an officer with the EU's European
Drugs Intelligence Unit in The Hague, an organization that many expect
will become part of a future "EUROPOL." A Swedish law enforcement
officer is slated to be posted to Paris in 1996.
Agreements and Treaties. Sweden is a party to the 1988 UN Convention
Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances
and is fully meeting the Convention's goals and objectives. Sweden also
is a party to the 1961 Single Convention, as amended by the 1972
Protocol, and to the 1971 Convention on Psychotropic Substances.
Sweden has bilateral Customs Agreements with the United States, Germany,
the United Kingdom, The Netherlands, France, Finland, Denmark, Norway,
Iceland, Spain, Poland, Russia, Estonia, and Hungary. Sweden cooperates
with the United States under a 1984 Extradition Treaty. A new bilateral
Customs Agreement came into force in 1995 with Lithuania. Similar
agreements negotiated in 1995 with Latvia, the Czech Republic, and
Slovakia are expected to be ratified and put into force in 1996.
Law Enforcement. Swedish law enforcement authorities are efficient and
effective. In 1995, there were 11,067 individual seizures by police and
customs. The drugs most often seized were amphetamines, with 4,316
seizures totaling 279 kg. The second-most commonly seized drug was
cannabis/hashish, with 3853 seizures totaling 527 kg (compared to 457 kg
in 1994). Swedish authorities also seized 31 kg of heroin (compared to
21 kg in 1994), and 37 kg of cocaine (compared to 29 kg in 1994).
Corruption. Corruption is very rare and, when discovered, is severely
punished. Anti-corruption laws effectively deter public officials from
engaging in the illicit production or distribution of drugs, and in the
laundering of drug money.
Cultivation/Production. No illicit drugs are known to be cultivated or
produced in significant amounts in Sweden. No amphetamine labs were
seized or destroyed in 1995. Police attribute this to tight controls on
precursor chemicals and to a relatively low street price for
amphetamine. It is more profitable for criminals to smuggle amphetamine
into Sweden than to produce it in Sweden in clandestine labs.
Drug Flow/Transit. Sweden is a destination point for narcotics from
Poland, Denmark, Finland (from Russia) and the Baltic nations. The
drugs enter the country in commercial goods, overland, by mail, by air
and by ferry. Authorities are particularly concerned about the increase
in illicit drug smuggling from Poland, the Baltics and Russia. The
Netherlands remains the main source for amphetamines, but increasing
amounts of amphetamines originate in Poland. Once in Sweden, few drugs
are transported to other countries.
Demand Reduction. The Swedish National Institute of Public Health
coordinates all drug preventive efforts. The dissemination of
information on the dangers of drug abuse is compulsory in Swedish
schools. Political, religious, sports, and other organizations receive
government subsidies to implement information and activity programs
aimed at educating youth and parents on the dangers of drug abuse.
Various private organizations also are active in drug abuse prevention
and public information programs.
The GOS emphasizes drug abuse prevention combined with restrictive drug
policy, enforcement measures, and drug rehabilitation. For example, a
program begun in early 1996 to reform a part of downtown Stockholm that
had become a gathering place for addicts included, not only arrests and
seizures, but also a quick link-up to social authorities for detoxification.
Under Swedish law, individuals who abuse drugs can be
sentenced to drug treatment.
IV. US Policy Initiatives and Programs
Bilateral Cooperation. Swedish cooperation with United States
Government (USG) law enforcement authorities continues to be excellent.
In 1995, the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) ran a major
training program on asset forfeiture in Stockholm for police, customs
officers, and prosecutors from the Nordic countries.
The Road Ahead. The USG looks forward to strengthening its good
counter-narcotics cooperation with the GOS. The USG will encourage
Sweden to continue to push for UNDCP reform and to expand its efforts,
along with those of other European countries, to assist in the counternarcotics
activities of the Baltic nations and the Newly Independent
States of the Former Soviet Union.
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