Myanmar operation results in the largest synthetic drug seizures in the history of East and Southeast Asia

Myanmar operation results in the largest synthetic drug seizures in the history of East and Southeast Asia
(File) Foreign military attaches check drugs in a football ground where seized drugs, vehicles, laboratory accessories and precursor chemicals are being displayed to be witnessed by invited military attaches and journalists in Kawnghka at Shan State on March 6, 2020. Photo: Ye Aung Thu/AFP
(File) Foreign military attaches check drugs in a football ground where seized drugs, vehicles, laboratory accessories and precursor chemicals are being displayed to be witnessed by invited military attaches and journalists in Kawnghka at Shan State on March 6, 2020. Photo: Ye Aung Thu/AFP

Myanmar police confirm seizing approximately 18 tons of methamphetamine, unprecedented methyl fentanyl, a range of other drugs, key precursor and pre-precursor chemicals, and several major illicit drug laboratories and staging areas, in one of the largest and most successful counter-narcotics operations in the history of the country and region.

Carried out with the support of the Myanmar military between the 20th of February and the 9th of April in and around Lwe Kham village of Kutkhai Township, Shan State, the operation started with a modest seizure of methamphetamine yaba tablets which subsequently led to the discovery of: 193.55 million tablets (equivalent to 17.4 tons of methamphetamine), over 500 kg of crystal methamphetamine and 630 kg of ephedrine; 3,748.5 litres of methyl fentanyl; 292 kg of heroin, 588 kg of opium and 49 kg of morphine; 6.8 kg of ketamine; and various precursor and pre-precursor chemicals totalling 35.5 tons and 163 thousand litres. “We are pleased to report the results of the operation with UNODC, and to make it clear to traffickers that their days of operating in Myanmar are numbered”, commented Colonel Zaw Lin, Head of Law Enforcement of the Myanmar CCDAC. “We are meeting our commitments to our Mekong MOU and international partners, and responding to the growing challenge of synthetic drugs facing this country and the region, and we hope our neighbours will take note and work with us, and do the same.”

 Evidence of militia involvement was uncovered during the operation which resulted in the arrest of 33 Myanmar and foreign nationals. “What has been unearthed through this operation is truly off-the-charts, and it is clear that a network of production facilities like those found would not be possible without the involvement and financial backing of serious transnational organized criminal groups”, remarked Jeremy Douglas, UNODC Regional Representative for Southeast Asia and the Pacific. “We can today confirm that drug production and trafficking in and through Shan is not what some have been thinking; it is more than meth tablets and crystal and has evolved to synthetic opioids on a scale nobody anticipated.”

The record-breaking series of seizures and arrests come at a time when East and Southeast Asia are beginning to witness the emergence of dangerous synthetic opioids in the regional drug market. “We have been projecting this scenario for a few years, and we are now able to say it is happening,” explained Douglas. “Big international syndicates already active in the Golden Triangle are well positioned to take advantage of regional heroin demand and produce synthetic opioids alongside other drugs. We have witnessed a displacement scenario play-out with the supply of methamphetamine over the past few years, and Southeast Asia is clearly not prepared for something similar with fentanyl.”

Aside from illicit drugs, Myanmar Police have seized sophisticated laboratory and production equipment and 39 different chemicals, all of which were largely trafficked across the border between China and Myanmar as well as from India, Thailand and Viet Nam through Laos.

The expansion and diversification of the regional drug market is occurring alongside several years of decreases in opium poppy cultivation, suggesting that the Golden Triangle and Southeast Asia are poised to become a significant source of synthetic drugs for other parts of the world. “We are well aware of the challenges we face,” commented Colonel Zaw Lin. “Criminal groups, traffickers and corrupt accomplices must and will be brought to justice, and Myanmar remains committed to working together with UNODC and neighbouring countries as a part of our Mekong MOU and ASEAN regional plans to counter organized crime.”

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