Complex international racket may be too big
for authorities to get a handle on
Thailand
is facing an epidemic of drug smuggling in a complex international racket that
appears too massive and entrenched for authorities to stop.
Police
said on May 2 that they had seized 1 million illicit methamphetamine pills,
weeks after discovering nearly 50 million legal tablets to treat common
ailments had been stolen from Thailand's hospitals, to make powerful speed
drugs to sell to addicts. An additional 2 billion similar tablets to treat
common colds have been smuggled in from Taiwan and South Korea, also to make
illegal drugs, authorities said.
Corrupt
chemists and drug dealers have been extracting ephedrine and pseudoephedrine
from legal cold remedies and similar medicines in Thailand and secretly
shipping it across the border into Laos and Myanmar, also known as Burma, where
gangs use the ingredients to create a range of amphetamine-based drugs.
Myanmar's
drug gangs work among heavily armed minority ethnic insurgents including the
Shan, Wa, and other tribes in the lawless, mountainous jungles near the border
where the two countries meet.
Ephedrine
and pseudoephedrine are used to widen bronchial passages and relieve asthma,
hay fever, nasal congestion, allergies and the common cold but can also be a
precursor chemical to manufacture methamphetamines.
Officials
estimate one legal cold tablet's ephedrine or pseudoephedrine can be cooked to
make three or four methamphetamine pills, enabling gangs to rapidly multiply
their output. The speed-like pills they make are then illegally smuggled back
into Thailand and sold to users, or distributed to other countries.
Investigators
say they achieved a major breakthrough in February when they found big piles of
empty wrappers for cold remedies -- but no pills. Many of the empty packets
were shredded and dumped in a northern forest near Chiang Mai city. The packets
could have contained up to five million tablets from 10 different remedies,
police said.
Investigators
traced the labels to several hospitals, where staff were suspected of siphoning
off huge amounts of medicine from legal stocks in their pharmacies to sell to
smugglers. The Department of Special Investigation (DSI) -- Thailand's version
of the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation -- joined police to question
hospital staff, government officials, and others and were reportedly inspecting
more than 875 hospitals.
The
numbers of pills -- legal and illegal -- are staggering.
"Up
to 48.3 million cold pills are thought to have been stolen from [Thailand's]
state hospitals and smuggled across the border to make methamphetamines,"
the Bangkok Post reported on March 29.
A
medicine purchasing staffer at one northern hospital allegedly confessed to
forging his director's signature to order more than 210,000 tablets, the DSI
said in April.
In the
latest case, Bangkok police searched a townhouse on Wednesday (May 2), discovered
one million methamphetamine pills, and arrested two people, according to the
Narcotics Suppression Bureau's Commander, Police Lt-Gen Chaiwat Chotima.
The
building was a secret storeroom for pills brought to the capital from northern
Thailand, Lt-Gen Chaiwat said, but it was not immediately clear if the drugs
were made from pilfered ephedrine and pseudoephedrine.
Police
meanwhile said they seized more than 200,000 speed pills in a truck at a
supermarket's parking lot near Bangkok on April 13, just before the drugs were
to be delivered to a dealer.
Bigger
discoveries in April came when the DSI said two Thai companies allegedly forged
documents to smuggle at least 2 billion pseudoephedrine-based cold tablets to
Bangkok from Taiwan in 2009, amid plans to bring in an additional 8 billion
pills. The DSI said the two companies also bought 85 million cold tablets from
South Korea, smuggling the medicine on nine separate flights to Bangkok,
starting in 2010.
False
air cargo manifests allegedly deceived customs agents by describing the
shipments as equipment for Thai companies which supplied electronics and
automobile parts. One of the companies, which legally imports electronics, said
it was innocent and blamed criminals for stealing its logo and company name to
buy the tablets.
"After
we appeared in headlines about pseudoephedrine smuggling, we have faced damage
from intensive inspections of our products by customs officials," said
UTAC Thai Co. Ltd.'s deputy managing director, Thanakhom Chawasiri.
"We
have to keep on probing the case because the company's name appears in drug
purchases from South Korea and Taiwan," DSI Chief Tarit Pengdith told
reporters on Friday (April 27), apparently correcting earlier reports which
pointed to China as a major source.
Tarit
said he obtained evidence from drug officials in the two east Asian countries,
and acknowledged that the company's name may have been misused by criminals.
To
strangle the supply of ephedrine and pseudoephedrine, Thailand in April
announced a ban on the public sale of medicine containing the inexpensive
chemicals -- but the ban created a problem for hospitals and pharmacies trying
to treat patients.
The
Public Health Ministry ordered all drug stores and clinics to surrender
medicines containing ephedrine and pseudoephedrine to health authorities by
Thursday (May 3), and said about 6 million such tablets had already been turned
in during April.
Future
purchases of such remedies, including liquids such as expectorants, will need
clearance from the Narcotics Control Division, it said.
Traffickers
from Iran and elsewhere are meanwhile muscling in on the gangs by importing
speed pills into Thailand and offering them for much cheaper prices, police
said.
"There
are very real fears the cheap drugs from Iranian gangs will be sold to
customers in the lower end of the market," Narong Rattananukul, deputy
secretary-general of the Office of the Narcotics Control Board, said on April
15.
Several
Iranian men and women have been busted during the past several months while
arriving at Bangkok's international airport, allegedly bringing in large
supplies of methamphetamines and similar drugs.
Methamphetamines
are more popular than any other illegal drug in Thailand, which is burdened
with an estimated 1.2 million addicts who also include consumers of opium,
heroin, marijuana and other drugs, according to the Office of the Narcotics
Control Board. Thailand's meth users include thrill-seekers at nightclubs,
concerts and parties, alongside students cramming to pass exams.
The
pills are also swallowed by exploited workers at construction sites, fisheries
and other industrial zones.
Slum-dwellers,
transport drivers, diet-obsessed people and others are also buying the roughly
produced pills which sell for about $6 each and are swallowed or smoked.
Methamphetamines
abuse is so widespread that elephants are sometimes force-fed the stimulants to
make them work longer hours while hauling logs, entertaining tourists, or
performing other tasks.
Thailand's
government, media and public popularly describe methamphetamines as "yaa
baa" or "crazy medicine" because users sometimes exhibit bizarre
or psychotic behavior.
Occasionally,
a frenzied addict will seize a victim in public, and hold a knife to the
person's throat, while screaming demands before being subdued, arrested and
imprisoned.
Richard
S. Ehrlich
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