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U.S. Department of State
1996 International Narcotics Control Strategy Report, March 1997
United States Department of State
Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs
SWEDEN
I. Summary
Sweden is not a major illicit drug production or transiting country, but
Swedish authorities are concerned about the increasing amounts of amphetamines
entering Sweden from Holland and Poland and through the Baltics. Swedish
authorities consider the diversion of precursor chemicals and money laundering
activity to be a relatively minor problem. Sweden has a zero tolerance policy
on drug consumption and opposes liberalization. Sweden is a party to the 1988
Convention.
II. Status of Country
After a failed experiment with drug liberalization in the 1960s, Sweden has
pursued a very restrictive policy toward illicit drugs. Amphetamine and
cannabis/hashish are the most frequently abused drugs. The newest trend is
ecstacy abuse among the young (ages 15-20). Smaller quantities of heroin and
LSD are also used. The 1995 Annual Report on the State of the Drug Problem,
published by the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction,
reported that the rate of severe drug abusers in Sweden was between 160-230
per 100,000. Swedish authorities believe the number of hard core daily drug
users has not changed significantly, although smaller studies suggest that
weekend use among the young is increasing.
The Government of Sweden (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 (over $15,700) with the Swedish central bank and report any
suspicious individuals/transactions to the police. The government is
preparing additional legislation in 1997 to tighten existing money laundering
controls.
III. Country Actions Against Drugs in 1996
Policy Initiatives. The Swedish police maintain a cooperative, informal
relationship with authorities in many countries to curb drug smuggling.
Swedish customs and police officials train Baltic authorities in drug
trafficking intelligence work. An ongoing program started in 1993 allocates
$8.5 million over a multi-year period to a project for Swedish police and
customs officials to assist Baltic nations in building criminal surveillance
centers. Sweden also tries to assist Russia in drug enforcement work.
Sweden participates in a number of international antidrug fora, including the
UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs, the UNDCP, and the Dublin Group. During the
year, Sweden actively promoted reform of multilateral drug control activities
in the UNDCP by holding seminars and meetings involving other nations. Almost
$1 million was set aside for this and other reform-related efforts. In
December, Sweden hosted an informal preparatory meeting for the UNGA special
session on drugs in 1998. According to the Swedish Ministry for Foreign
Affairs, Sweden pledged approximately SEK 28 million (about $4.3 million) in
FY96 to the UNDCP, making it one of the largest donors.
An additional $1.4 million was set aside for bilateral work against drugs by
the Swedish International Development Authority (SIDA). In FY96, Sweden's
contribution to the UN World Health Organization's substance abuse program was
about $4 million.
"European Cities Against Drugs," an alliance of major cities that espouses
zero tolerance policies and no liberalization, is a growing Europe-wide
movement founded in Sweden. The alliance maintains its secretariat in
Stockholm and organized a high-level conference in June with over a hundred
participants, including officials from the US.
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 1996. Swedish customs officers patrol Sweden's
borders with EU countries and 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 percent. Within EU councils,
Sweden advocates zero-tolerance policies.
In 1996, a Swedish customs official was assigned to Paris. Swedish police and
customs drug liaison officers are in The Hague, Bangkok, Athens, Copenhagen,
Lisbon, London, Warsaw, Tallinn, Riga, Bonn, Budapest and Moscow. Sweden has
a customs officer with the EU's European drugs intelligence unit in the Hague,
an organization that many expect will become part of a future "Europol."
Work is under way for the passage of legislation -- probably in 1997 -- to
make it punishable to drive under the influence of illicit narcotics or
certain medical drugs. Another project is making designer drugs illegal
through new legislation. The government is aware that it lacks statistics on
cases of drug-related deaths; it intends to address this problem in 1997.
Agreements and Treaties. Sweden is a party to the 1988 UN Convention and
is fully meeting the Convention's goals and objectives. Sweden also is a
party to the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, as amended by the 1972
Protocol, and to the 1971 Convention on Psychotropic Substances. Sweden has
also acceded to the World Customs Organization's 1977 International Convention
on Mutual Administrative Assistance for the Prevention, Investigation, and
Repression of Customs Offences. Annex 10 of this Convention, which Sweden has
accepted, deals with assistance in action against the smuggling of narcotic
drugs and psychotropic substances.
Sweden has bilateral customs agreements with the US, Germany, the UK, the
Netherlands, France, Finland, Denmark, Norway, Iceland, Spain, Poland, Russia,
Estonia, Lithuania, and Hungary. Similar agreements negotiated in 1995 with
Latvia, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia were ratified and came into force in
1996. Sweden cooperates with the US under a 1984 extradition treaty.
Law Enforcement Efforts. From January through November, police and
customs made 9,781 individual seizures, compared to 11,317 seizures in all of
1995. The drugs most often seized were amphetamines, which surpassed
cannabis/hashish seizures for the third year in a row.
Corruption. Corruption is very rare and when discovered is consistently
punished.
Cultivation/Production. No illicit drugs are known to be cultivated or
produced in significant amounts in Sweden. One amphetamine lab was seized and
destroyed in 1996. Police attribute this to tight controls on precursor
chemicals and to a relatively low street price for amphetamine and other
drugs. It is more profitable for criminals to smuggle drugs into Sweden than
to produce them in Sweden in clandestine labs.
Drug Flow/Transit. Sweden is a destination for illicit narcotics from
Poland, Denmark (originally produced in the Netherlands and Belgium), Finland
(from Russia) and the Baltic nations, especially Estonia, as well as from
South America and Asia. The drugs enter the country among commercial goods,
over land, 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 is the source for approximately half of
all amphetamines seized, but increasing amounts of amphetamines originate in
Poland.
Heroin from Turkey is transported into Sweden by trucks through Germany, often
by citizens of the former Yugoslavia. Heroin from Afghanistan, Pakistan, and
Iran often passes through Eastern Europe on its way to the Nordic markets,
including Sweden. Cocaine is most often smuggled into Sweden by airplane
passengers from South America, via other EU airports; a new trend is to have
criminal groups in eastern Europe involved as well. Customs officials believe
their new access to flight booking computers will result in more seizures.
Demand Reduction. The government maintains a strict approach on drug
control issues. The Swedish National Institute for Public Health coordinates
all drug preventive efforts and subsidizes drug use prevention programs in the
private sector. 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. However, recent opinion polls show a more
tolerant attitude to drugs, especially toward the use of cannabis and ecstasy,
particularly among the young.
The GOS emphasizes drug abuse prevention combined with restrictive drug
policy, enforcement measures, and drug rehabilitation. For example, to combat
the newest drug, ecstacy, a special police unit of 15 officers in downtown
Stockholm has been formed go to nightspots and "rave" parties to identify
young newcomers to the rave culture who are abusing and/or selling ecstacy.
Under Swedish law, individuals who abuse drugs can be sentenced to drug
treatment.
IV. U.S. Policy Initiatives and Programs
Bilateral Cooperation. Swedish cooperation with US law enforcement
authorities is excellent.
The Road Ahead. The USG looks forward to further strengthening its already
good counternarcotics cooperation with Sweden, particularly in the broad
Nordic-Baltics and NIS context.
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