Pubdate: Wed, 28 Feb 2007
Source: Bangkok Post (Thailand)
Copyright: The Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd. 2007
Contact:  http://www.bangkokpost.co.th/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/39

THE WAR THAT WON'T GO AWAY

Like most wars, the society problem often labelled as the "war on 
drugs" is a matter of many small battles. This war has had many ups 
and downs since the government of Gen Sarit Thanarat banned opium in 
1959. It should not be surprising that drug trafficking and usage are 
increasing once again.

The powerful profits of the drug gangs, combined with corruption and 
inattention, make it certain that the drugs trade remains a threat. 
What is important for the well-being of the country is that 
authorities stay alert, and stop fighting this war with yesterday's 
battle tactics. The fact of resurgent drug trafficking now seems 
beyond debate. This will surprise some people, who thought that the 
murderous and intimidating campaign of the former government might be 
the decisive, winning battle. Under ex-premier Thaksin Shinawatra, 
police and anti-drug forces teamed up in a campaign to wipe out petty 
drug-dealing. A chief tactic was the extra-judicial murder. Neither 
the overall death toll nor the number of totally innocent people 
killed is known. The best guess is that somewhere around 1,200 people died.

Authorities must be pushed and supported by the public to pursue the 
abuses of civil rights in the 2003 campaign against the amphetamines 
trade. Police have dragged their feet, and the military-backed 
government has not taken up the cases aggressively enough. But there 
also are two lessons here, seemingly unlearnt. First is the fact, as 
we now see, that a vigilante campaign against small-time drug dealers 
does little to inhibit the trade in illegal drugs. The second is that 
there must be strict and clear guidelines that police who step 
outside the law to kill suspects will be dealt with swiftly and 
harshly - by the law they so badly disrespect.

But what of 2007? Hilltribe leaders have warned clearly of increasing 
heroin trade from Burma's part of the Golden Triangle. The top 
government experts of the Office of the Narcotics Control Board have 
just as clearly warned of a resurgence of drug use. The drug 
traffickers have evolved. The Burma-based drug gangs no longer trek 
opium on the backs of mules. They use a sophisticated, international 
smuggling ring with all the tools of globalisation, rapid movement 
across borders and contacts around the world.

New drugs are entering Thailand from abroad, creating a spiralling 
upward demand for so-called recreational drugs - cocaine from South 
America, ecstasy from Europe, crystal methamphetamine from Southeast 
Asian labs, and many more. There are worrying signs elsewhere inside 
Thailand. The opium crop, negligible for two decades, has grown 
significantly. Authorities must stop and reverse this alarming trend. 
There is little opium consumption in Thailand. A growth in opium 
acreage means the drugs gangs are financing farmers to provide the 
raw material for heroin. One way or the other, the ONCB must persuade 
the landowners to stop.

Once again, the lack of information and education is effectively 
encouraging drug use and drug smuggling, particularly by young 
people. From harsher prison sentences to nightclub raids for urine 
tests, the focus is entirely on the suppliers of the drugs. There 
must be far more attention to the demand side of this dirty business. 
A generation of youngsters has little information about illicit 
drugs. The downside of drug addiction and abuse is seldom mentioned. 
Nor is there much said about the most dramatic reason not to become 
involved in drug trafficking. Young Thais, mostly women, are flying 
off to South America on an expedition to pick up cocaine. In many 
cases, they are not coming back. The penalties for drug smuggling in 
that part of the world are as harsh as in Thailand; the prisons are worse.

Finally, the lack of international cooperation in combatting the 
cross-border drug gangs remains depressing. Burma cooperates little, 
but in fact the lines of communications even among willing countries are slow.

Make no mistake. The battles against drug trafficking constitute a 
real war. That conflict was declared by drug gangs against society. 
And society must fight back.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman