Blinken calls for closer global cooperation on tackling synthetic drugs
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[March 16, 2024]
By Humeyra Pamuk and Francois Murphy
VIENNA (Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Friday
called for greater international cooperation to fight the booming
trafficking of illicit synthetic drugs such as fentanyl, the leading
cause of overdose deaths in his country.
He was speaking at an annual meeting of the U.N. Commission on Narcotic
Drugs (CND), which reviews global drug regulation and each year adds new
so-called precursor chemicals - ingredients used to make illicit drugs -
to international lists known as schedules to place strict controls on
their trade.
"More than 40% of the American people know someone who has died from an
opioid overdose. Synthetic drugs are now the number one killer of
Americans aged 18 to 45," Blinken said in a speech to the two-day
"high-level segment" of the CND.
While the drugs and the scale of the problem may vary by country, "in
every region, use, dependence, overdose deaths by synthetic drugs are
rising rapidly", he said.
"My message to this gathering is urgent. If we want to change the
trajectory of this crisis, there is only one way to succeed, and that's
together," he said.
This year the CND, which is meeting in Vienna until the end of next
week, is considering adding two fentanyl precursors to the schedules,
which the United States supports. While such "scheduling" is necessary,
U.N. officials say the process is a losing battle.
"The current international scheduling system is absolutely very
effective in putting one substance out of the reach of illicit drug
traffickers, but unfortunately is very little efficient in slowing down
the pace of evolution of illicit drug manufacturing," Antonio Mazzitelli
of the International Narcotics Control Board, which monitors compliance
with the schedules, told a separate event at the CND meeting.
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U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken delivers remarks at the 67th
Session of the UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs at Vienna
International Centre, in Vienna, Austria March 15, 2024.
REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/Pool
"As soon as a substance is put under
control, another one replaces it," he added.
Blinken echoed that sense of facing a cunning opponent.
"The criminal groups that produce these drugs are agile. When one
country cracks down on the production of a synthetic drug, or the
chemical precursors that go into making them, criminals quickly find
another place to produce them," he said.
Through a combination of other initiatives, however, such as closer
cooperation with allies and working with social media companies to
disrupt the synthetic drug trade online, there have been some
successes, he said.
"We have recent data that suggests that for the first time in years,
the number of Americans who died of overdoses did not increase
significantly. The number has leveled off. Now with one American
still dying of a drug overdose every five minutes, our work is far
from finished," Blinken said.
"But the change suggests that the steps we're taking, many in
partnership with countries here in this room, are making a
difference, are starting to turn the tide," he added.
(Additional reporting by Laura Gottesdiener; Writing by Francois
Murphy)
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