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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
INTERNATIONAL NARCOTICS CONTROL STRATEGY REPORT, MARCH 1996
United States Department of State
Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Heroin and Opiates
Though cocaine still holds center stage on the US drug scene, heroin is
lurking conspicuously in the wings. While it is just as deadly and
addictive as cocaine, heroin, as an opiate, has a property that appeals
to the drug trade's long range planners: it allows many addicts to
develop a tolerance to the drug. Where constant cocaine use may kill a
regular user in five years, a heroin addiction can last for a decade or
more, as long as the addict has access to a regular maintenance "fix."
And often such an addict can maintain the facade of a relatively normal
life. This insidious property potentially assures the heroin trade of a
long term customer base of hard-core addicts.
Unfortunately, heroin seems to be gathering a growing following in the
United States. The US heroin addict population, which had remained
stable at about 500,000 persons for nearly two decades, has grown to
about 600,000 and may well be higher. A disturbing trend of multiple
drug use suggests that more of America's 2.1 million hard-core cocaine
addicts are using heroin to cushion the "crash" that follows the
euphoria of crack use. The availability of a more potent, high purity
heroin that can be snorted or smoked instead of injected may also add to
its appeal. It frees the user from hypodermic syringes and the added
threat of acquiring AIDS from a contaminated needle. There is a danger
that heroin may gain acceptance as an upscale drug only distantly linked
to the junkies and derelicts of the 1960's. The heroin industry seems
to be counting on a new generation's ignorance of its devastating
consequences in order to develop a secure and lucrative market in the
Western Hemisphere.
Elsewhere in the world, heroin's position as the drug of choice remains
secure. Bumper opium poppy crops in Southwest Asia have helped feed a
superabundance of heroin to markets throughout Europe. This year's
INCSR chapters report an upsurge in heroin availability in virtually
every country in Europe and countries of the former Soviet Union. The
northern branch of the Balkan Route is moving greater quantities of
heroin to markets in the Czech Republic, Hungary, and other countries in
Eastern Europe, as more open borders facilitate transit of the drug.
Heroin seizures continue to be commonplace in Africa, where Nigeria is a
planning and distribution hub for most of the heroin destined for Europe
and other African countries. In Southeast Asia, heroin continues to
challenge traditional opium use. China is experiencing growing
addiction problems, with teenagers making up the bulk of registered
addicts. In Thailand, heroin has displaced opium as the drug of choice
among the hilltribes. This, in turn, has allowed heroin trafficking
organizations to expand their networks throughout northern Thailand. In
short, wherever one looks, the heroin trade appears to be on the march.
Wholesale Advantage. Part of the allure of heroin to the drug trade is
its wholesale advantage. While heroin and cocaine are priced
competitively at the street level (roughly $100 per gram), at the
wholesale level heroin is ten to twenty times more profitable to the
drug syndicates. Where a kilo of cocaine will sell wholesale for
between $10,500 and $40,000; a kilo of heroin fetches between $150,000
to $250,000. Little wonder then that the South American cocaine
trafficking syndicates wish to take advantage of the wholesale
profitability of the heroin trade, especially as marketing opportunities
seem to abound.
Source and Transit Highlights. In the Western Hemisphere, there was
good news as USG imagery determined that Colombia's opium poppy
cultivation was only about one third as great as previously estimated.
While considerably less than the 20,000 hectares estimated in previous
years, Colombia's 6,540 hectares, assuming three crops per year, make it
the largest potential opium producer in the Hemisphere. Across the
border in Venezuela, government authorities located and destroyed 1,600
hectares of poppy in the Serrania de Perija frontier region. This was
the second year that Venezuelan law enforcement agencies found a spill-
over from Colombian opium poppy cultivation. In Peru, where the
government in the past has destroyed numerous small poppy plots, for the
second year authorities seized a commercial quantity of opium gum.
This action follows reports that Mexican drug mafias have increased
their presence in Peru and are pressing Huallaga Valley campesinos to
plant poppies. Further moves toward opium poppy cultivation should be a
source of concern, since it represents a continuing escalation of Latin
America's already serious drug production problems. It is also a matter
of concern to the United States, since the quality of South American
heroin is improving. In its 1994 NNICC Report, issued in August 1995,
the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) noted that South American
heroin had the highest purity (average 59.3 percent) of any samples
analyzed under its Domestic Monitor Program.
Since Guatemala has successfully eliminated all but a negligible amount
of poppy cultivation--another testimonial to the critical importance of
aerial eradication--Mexico remains the second largest Latin American
grower of opium poppy. At the end of the year, the Mexican government
had eradicated over 6,600 hectares, leaving approximately 5,800 hectares
under cultivation. Mexico's cultivation levels in 1994 were the highest
since 1989, when the Salinas government began an aggressive campaign to
reduce opium production.
Nigeria remains central to the worldwide heroin trade. Nigerian
traffickers smuggle Asian heroin to the United States and to Europe.
They are also among the leading carriers of Southeast and Southwest
Asian heroin into the United States. Last year, Interpol listed
Nigerian couriers as the third largest heroin smuggling group in the
world. Nigerian traffickers are believed to be using Hungary as a
transit point for drugs.
Europe remains a steadily growing market for Southwest Asian heroin.
The centuries-old Balkan smuggling route from Turkey to Austria has been
expanded northward into Romania, Hungary, and the Czech and Slovak
Republics, and southward through Croatia, Slovenia, the Former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia, Greece and Albania. Slovakia is becoming a key
conduit for smuggling Southwest Asian heroin to Western Europe. The
seizure by Slovakian authorities of a Turkish truck destined for Germany
with a record load of over 200 kilograms of heroin was an alarming
indication of the quantities moving along the trifurcated Balkan Route.
Turkish trafficking groups, with distributors in ethnic enclaves in
major European cities, control much of the Balkan Route heroin trade.
Russia has emerged as a key drug market, a conduit for smuggling illicit
drugs to Western markets, and a producer of illicit amphetamines and
opium poppy. The break-up of the Soviet Union and the transition to a
market economy are making Russia more vulnerable to organized and
financial crimes, including those involving narcotics. Russian
authorities claim that drug use is now accelerating at a fifty percent
increase per year and there are now over 2 million drug users in Russia.
Law enforcement authorities believe that Russian criminal groups control
most of the trafficking and distribution in Russia. Most appear to
operate locally, but many of the small criminal gangs located in the
Central Asian and Transcaucus states and Ukraine have formed links with
Russian distributors in key Russian cities.
Ukraine's considerable role as a conduit for drug smuggling from Central
Asia and Turkey to Europe is reflected in over 23 tons of narcotics
seized in the first half of 1995. Moreover, authorities have also begun
to seize chemical shipments destined for Southwest Asia for use in the
production of illicit narcotics such as heroin.
The Central Asian countries of Kazakstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and
Uzbekistan, once important opium poppy growing regions of the old Soviet
Union, are now playing a greater role in heroin trafficking. Since
Kazakstan is a transportation and communication bridge between Europe
and Asia, trafficking organizations have been moving significant and
increasing quantities of opium from Southwest Asia and China to Russia,
other Newly Independent States (NIS) and Europe. A recent increase in
seizures along the Kazak with China reflects increased trafficking of
Southeast Asian heroin through Kazakstan.
In 1995, Kyrgyzstan officials seized one ton of opium that was destined
for Western markets. Kyrgyzstan's location makes it attractive to
increased transit trade as heroin and hashish traffickers seek new
routes from Pakistan and Afghanistan to Russia and the West. The
growing use of this route by traffickers to channel drugs from
Afghanistan to the NIS and the West has resulted in a corresponding rise
in drug related crimes in Kyrgyzstan itself. Tajikistan, in 1995,
remained a major conduit for smuggling opium and hashish from
Afghanistan to Russia, the NIS, and Europe. In October 1995, the Tajik
Customs Service made its first-ever seizure of heroin on the Afghan
border. Tajikistan government security officials estimate that the flow
of drugs transiting Tajikistan is on the rise.
In Southwest Asia, opium poppy cultivation rose significantly in 1995.
Most of the increase came from Afghanistan, where USG surveys show a 33
percent increase in poppy cultivation over the 1993-94 figures. Afghan
opium is the source of much of Europe's heroin. Sophisticated Pakistani
trafficking organizations operating out of Quetta, Pakistan, smuggle
heroin base and morphine out of Afghanistan to the international market.
These groups place orders with the Afghani processors and arrange for
transshipment of the drugs from Afghanistan through Pakistan and to
Iranian or Turkish buyers who move it through Iran and into
international drug channels. Most Afghan opium is destined for
processing into heroin in Turkey. The finished heroin is sold primarily
in Europe, and to a lesser extent, in the United States. In Pakistan,
opium poppy cultivation dropped from 7,270 hectares in 1994 to 6,950
hectares at the end of 1995. Over 1,600 hectares were eradicated in a
major opium poppy eradication campaign.
The Golden Triangle area of Southeast Asia had a record year, with
estimated total potential opium production exceeding 4,000 metric tons.
Poppy cultivation was up in Burma and Laos, but dropped in China and
Thailand. As in previous years, Burma remained the world's largest
potential opium producer, with an estimated 2,340 metric tons available.
That amount could produce an estimated 234 metric tons of heroin, enough
to satisfy much of the world's craving for the drug. In 1995, Laos,
with an estimated 180 metric tons of potential opium production, edged
out Pakistan and became the world's third largest potential producer of
illegal opium after Burma and Afghanistan.
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