The US-China trade war
truce includes a pledge by Beijing to tackle another lucrative -- and deadly --
export: fentanyl, a potent opioid ravaging US communities.
A
pledge by Beijing to tackle fentanyl exports was part of a trade war truce
between US President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping
|
The
United States has pressed Beijing to do more to crack down on the drug, as
smugglers from China are suspected of being the main suppliers of the narcotic,
which is 50 times stronger than heroin.
At
the weekend G20 summit in Argentina, China agreed to designate any type of
fentanyl as controlled substances, with the US saying this would expose
offenders to the maximum penalty under Chinese law -- capital punishment.
President
Donald Trump said Wednesday the move could be a "game changer".
"If
China cracks down on this 'horror drug,' using the Death Penalty for
distributors and pushers, the results will be incredible!" Trump tweeted.
But
experts doubt it will make a major difference.
Fentanyl
production has become a "very profitable" business for Chinese
traffickers, said Mike Vigil, a former chief of international operations at the
US Drug Enforcement Administration.
It
is going to be tough for the Chinese government to control the business, he
said, "especially given the huge demand that we currently have in the
United States."
China
is believed to be one of the main manufacturers of synthetic drugs that have
been blamed for public health crises in the US, Canada and Australia among
other countries.
Getting
the drug is relatively easy: buyers find fentanyl from suppliers online, pay
for it with cryptocurrencies, credit cards or money transfers, and receive
their order via international mail services, according to a US congressional
report.
It
has become a booming business for clandestine chemical labs in China, where a
single kilogramme of fentanyl can produce 50 kilos of "high grade"
heroin, turning a less than US$10,000 investment into half a million dollars,
said Vigil.
According
to the US Centres for Disease Control, deaths from drug overdose in the US
surged to nearly 72,000 last year -- far more than traffic accident deaths,
gun-related deaths, or suicide. Fentanyl was linked to the deaths of singers
Prince and Tom Petty.
- Zero tolerance -
At
first glance, China does not seem like an ideal base for manufacturing and
shipping fentanyl to the United States. Scarred
by its own opium crisis in the 19th century, China has a zero tolerance policy
towards illicit drugs.
But
chemical distributors in China have been able to dodge international and
domestic law enforcement with fentanyl, which does have legal uses, such as
treating extreme pain for cancer patients.
China
has previously banned fentanyl variant by variant.
Savvy
chemists would simply tweak their chemical formula, creating an analogue or
slightly different chemical compound to bypass regulations.
China's
decision to list all fentanyl-like substances could address that issue, but systemic
challenges remain.
"It
seems to be that China just has a huge chemical and pharmaceutical industry,
and they just have too many firms and too few police to manage that
industry," said Bryce Pardo, a drug policy researcher at Rand Corporation,
a US-based think tank.
According
to a 2015 US State Department report, China had about 400,000 chemical
manufacturers and distributors.
China
also has an unknown number of underground chemical labs that produce synthetic
drugs. In 2015, Chinese authorities destroyed 259 labs and arrested 1,570
suspects, according to a 2017 US State Department report.
The
interests of provincial and central government authorities are also misaligned,
Pardo told AFP. Beijing sets the rules but turns enforcement over to local
authorities, "who are incentivized to export as much product as
possible."
The
Chinese foreign ministry said before the G20 talks last week that it had taken
measures to control 25 fentanyl analogues, increased intelligence sharing with
other countries and strengthened checks of suspicious parcels.
"The
US government surely has a bigger role to play in reducing the demand,"
ministry spokesman Geng Shuang told reporters.
"The
US has time and again accused China of being a key source of the fentanyl-like
substances at home, but never submitted any accurate statistics or effective
evidence to the Chinese side," he said.
- 'Last bulwark' -
Even
if China successfully cracks down on fentanyl, it is likely that another hub of
synthetic opioid production will pop up elsewhere, experts said.
Fentanyl
production could move to India, which has an enormous pharmaceutical industry
and labour supply with "the technical knowhow to synthesize these
chemicals," said Pardo.
Production
of illicit drugs won't stop at fentanyl either.
According
to China's narcotics control commission, domestic seizures of methamphetamine,
ketamine and other synthetic drugs climbed by 106% year-on-year in 2016, and
synthetic drug production was rising.
Enforcing
harsher punishments won't necessarily address the growing global drug demand,
said Michelle Miao, an expert on China's legal system at the Chinese University
of Hong Kong.
The
US "has launched the war on drugs in the past century, but what you can
see now is it is a total failure," she said.
"Criminal law should be the last bulwark when things are out of control", she added. "The last measure we can do is mete out punishment, because it does not really solve the root issues."
No comments:
Post a Comment