Mexico's navy warns dual use chemicals are boosting meth production
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[July 10, 2024]
By Lizbeth Diaz
MANZANILLO, Mexico (Reuters) - Mexican navy officials running the
country's biggest port are increasingly concerned about the rising flows
of unregulated "dual use" chemicals used to produce synthetic drugs such
as methamphetamine and fentanyl, four Navy officials told Reuters.
Mexico produces most of the fentanyl that ends up on U.S. streets,
according to U.S. officials. In recent years Mexico has also become a
major exporter of methamphetamine to Asian countries.
Navy officials at Manzanillo, Mexico's largest port by volume, said they
have seen an increase in imports of dual use chemicals, mostly from
China, that are used to manufacture legal items such as food, perfume
and pharmaceuticals but also double up as precursors to synthesize meth
and fentanyl.
Navy officials, giving Reuters a tour of the Pacific coast port, urged
the government to regulate the chemicals and highlighted large tubs that
have been seized and never claimed by Mexican companies importing them.
"Large quantities of 'dual' substances have been found in clandestine
laboratories, which gives us the certainty that they are used for the
production of synthetic drugs," said the Navy's chief Information and
Risk Analysis officer, who asked to remain unnamed for security reasons.
The officer at Manzanillo port, located in western Colima state, pointed
to a shipment from China that was seized in January with 88 metric tons
of glacial acetic acid, an unregulated chemical used in meth production.
Last month it was impounded because the importing company could not
prove the ownership.
Many seized substances, another Navy official said, are imported by
companies in the states of Jalisco and Sinaloa, the home bases of
Mexico's two biggest drug trafficking groups, the Sinaloa Cartel and its
rival, the Jalisco New Generation Cartel.
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"It is urgent to regulate the entry of dual substances into Mexico
because, without it, criminal groups dedicated to the manufacture of
methamphetamine will continue to increase their production," said a
third Navy official, who also asked not to be named.
The Mexican government did not immediately respond to a request for
comment.
Manzanillo port receives almost 60% of the containers that arrive in
Mexico daily. About 2% of the goods are physically searched as well
as 10% of the ships that dock at the port. When there are tips about
illegal incoming cargo, 100% of the products undergo searches,
officials say.
REGULATION URGENTLY NEEDED
Mexican cartels have long produced methamphetamine for the U.S.
market, but in recent year they have increased exports to far away
countries, such as Australia, the Netherlands and China.
The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) in its report
last month included Mexico for the first time in its list of top
meth manufacturers, along with Afghanistan, Burma and Syria.
Methamphetamine manufacturing in Mexico has increased by about 200%
in roughly the last three years, said the third Navy official.
"Manzanillo, because of its strategic position, is a window to ports
in Asia, South America and North America," said a fourth Navy
official, who is the commander of the Manzanillo Port Unit.
"International cooperation is definitely paramount to be able to
deal with these scourges," he added.
(Reporting by Lizbeth Diaz; Editing by Drazen Jorgic and Josie Kao)
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