Pubdate: Sat, 03 Nov 2001
Source: DAWN (Pakistan)
Copyright: 2001 The DAWN Group of Newspapers
Contact:  http://www.dawn.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/101
Author: Tahir Mirza

PAKISTAN, INDIA ON US LIST OF MAJOR DRUG PRODUCERS

WASHINGTON, Nov 3: Pakistan and India as well as Afghanistan remain on the 
list of countries that are considered as major producers of illicit drugs 
entering the United States or whose territory serves as a transit route for 
such drugs.

The list is sent by the administration annually to Congress, and the one 
for this year was released on Friday. But it is emphasized that the 
presence on the list of a country seen as a major drug-transit conduit does 
not constitute an "adverse reflection on its government's counter-narcotics 
efforts or on the level of its cooperation with the United States."

The list mentions the following countries: Afghanistan, the Bahamas, 
Bolivia, Brazil, Burma, China, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, 
Guatemala, Haiti, India, Jamaica, Laos, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, Panama, 
Paraguay, Peru, Thailand, Venezuela, and Vietnam.

In sending the list to Congress, President George Bush noted in a letter 
that among the reasons for inclusion "is the combination of geographical, 
commercial, and economic factors that allow drugs to transit despite the 
most assiduous enforcement measures of the government concerned."

The only change to the list from the previous year is the removal of 
Cambodia, which is stated to have presented no signs for several years of 
having been a major transit country for heroin.

The president's letter said: "In recent years, we have seen rapidly rising 
quantities of illegal synthetic drugs entering the United States, 
especially MDMA (Ecstasy) from Europe. The MDMA abuse is an emerging 
problem that we are studying closely. Because much of the Ecstasy consumed 
in Europe and the United States is manufactured clandestinely in the 
Netherlands, we are working closely with Dutch authorities to stop the 
production and export of the drug."

The US conducted probes in Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, the traditional opium 
poppy growing areas of the former Soviet Union. These probes did not show 
significant opium poppy cultivation.

While Iran was once a traditional opium-producing country, the president's 
letter says, the government there appears to have been successful in 
eradicating significant illicit opium poppy cultivation. The latest US 
government survey of the country revealed no detectable poppy cultivation 
in the traditional growing areas.

TERROR LIST: Also on Friday, 22 of the organizations already on the State 
Department's list of 28 officially designated foreign terrorist 
organizations (FTOs) were added to the list announced by the treasury 
department last month of groups or individuals targeted for financial 
sanctions, which had included six of the FTOs. Now all the FTOs are on the 
treasury list. The Harkatul Mujahideen has been on the FTO list for some time.
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