Burmese govt vows action against drug traffickers

Burmese govt vows action against drug traffickers
Drug dealers and users were arrested in northern Shan State’s Lashio Township on May 4, 2016. ( Photo : Lashio News)
Drug dealers and users were arrested in northern Shan State’s Lashio Township on May 4, 2016. ( Photo : Lashio News)

Burma’s government has pledged to take strong action against drug producers and traffickers across the country.

Speaking to Shan Herald following Tuesday’s Upper House of Parliament session in Naypyidaw, Sai Wan Leng Kham, an MP representing the Shan Nationalities League for Democracy, said that a proposal was passed on Tuesday after Upper House lawmakers had urged the Aung San Suu Kyi-led government to take decisive action on those involved in drugs in Burma.

“Deputy Minister for Home Affairs [Maj-Gen Aung Soe] has confirmed that this administration is cracking down on drug trafficking. He said that they will bring to justice those who are involved in the illicit production and trafficking of narcotics, whether they be drug dealers or government officials,” said Sai Wan Leng Kham, who has been active in drug eradication efforts in Shan State’s Lashio Township.

He added that the government must speed up efforts to deal with this issue because it has a major impact on so many people.

“The government must arrest those who are involved in the drugs trade,” he continued. “Drug addicts should be given information about the impact of drug use, and they should be treated at rehabilitation centers.”

Shan and Kachin states are by far the largest producers of opium and methamphetamines in the country. Burma is ranked second only to Afghanistan as the largest producer of opium in the world.

In an unsuccessful bid to eradicate opiates from Burma in 1999, the then ruling military regime declared a 15-year master plan. Then, in October 2012, President Thein Sein announced that the country would be free of opium production by 2019.  Nonetheless production, trafficking and in particular addiction appear to be continuously increasing.

Eyes will be on Suu Kyi’s new National League for Democracy government to assess whether its efforts bear fruit.

By Shan Herald Agency for News (SHAN)

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