Friday, March 26, 2010

PAKISTAN: UN-TRAINED OFFICIALS SEIZE DRUG-MAKING CHEMICALS WORTH NEARLY $6 MILLION

PAKISTAN: UN-TRAINED OFFICIALS SEIZE DRUG-MAKING CHEMICALS WORTH NEARLY $6 MILLION
New York, Mar 26 2010 10:10AM
Authorities trained by the United Nations anti-drug agency have seized the largest-ever amount of acetic anhydride – used to produce heroin from opium – in Pakistan, worth $5.5 million.

The chemicals, weighing nearly 16 tons, were found in barrels labeled as paint destined for the city of Karachi by authorities at Port Qasim.

Officials from Pakistan's anti-narcotic force, the Port Control Unit, made the seizure using profiling and intelligence-sharing techniques they had learned from the Container Control Programme of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (<"http://www.unodc.org/">UNODC) and the World Customs Organization (WCO).

"This record-breaking seizure shows that UNODC can train and equip law enforcement agents to find needles in a haystack," said the agency's Executive Director, Antonio Maria Costa.

Nearly all global trade is transported by sea, making smuggling via containers increasingly attractive for criminals and difficult to detect.

The Container Control Programme seeks to boost ports' capacities to intercept containers with illicit cargoes.

The seizer in Pakistan is the latest made in ports that have taken part in the initiative, including in Costa Rica, Ecuador, Ghana, Panama, Senegal and Turkmenistan.

"We are making smuggling via containers a riskier business," Mr. Costa stated.

UNODC has been working with Pakistan since 2007 to strengthen their ability to disrupt the trafficking of chemicals and drugs.

The Container Control Programme is now being extended to dry posts, including those close to the Afghan border, and will be expanded into Afghanistan, Iran, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan and Georgia.

"Pakistan's expertise in container security has developed so well that port officials who were trained by UNODC a few years ago are now trainers for other port authorities around the world and its container terminals are regarded as models for neighbouring States," said Ketil Ottersen, UNODC's Senior Coordinator for the Container Control Programme.
Mar 26 2010 10:10AM
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