UN: The war in Ukraine could allow illegal drug production to flourish, while the opium market’s future hinges on the fate of crisis-wracked Afghanistan, the United Nations warned Monday.
Previous experience from the Middle East and Southeast Asia suggests conflict zones can act as a “magnet” for making synthetic drugs, which can be manufactured anywhere, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said in its annual report.
“This effect may be greater when the conflict area is near large consumer markets.”
The UNODC said the number of dismantled amphetamine laboratories in Ukraine rose from 17 in 2019 to 79 in 2020, the highest number of seized laboratories reported in any country in 2020.
Ukraine’s capacity to produce synthetic drugs could grow as the war continues, it added. “You don’t have police going around and stopping laboratories” in conflict zones, UNODC expert Angela Me told AFP.
The report also noted that conflict could shift and disrupt drug trafficking routes, with suggestions that trafficking in Ukraine has fallen since early 2022.
The situation in Afghanistan — which produced 86 percent of the world’s opium in 2021 — will shape the development of the opiate market, the UN report added.
An estimated 284 million people used a drug in 2021, or one in every 18 people worldwide aged between 15 and 64, the report found. The figure was 26 percent higher than in 2010, with population growth only partially accounting for the change. Cocaine production climbed to a new record in 2020 at 1,982 tons.
– THE HINDUSTAN TIMES