Pubdate: Tue, 20 Jun 2000 Source: South China Morning Post (Hong Kong) Copyright: 2000 South China Morning Post Publishers Limited. Contact: http://www.scmp.com/ Author: Agence France-Presse US, MAINLAND TEAM UP TO FIGHT NARCOTICS TRADE The mainland and the United States yesterday signed their first agreement aimed at stopping the spread of illegal drugs, a move both sides hailed as a breakthrough in fighting crime. "Today the United States and China signed a mutual legal assistance agreement allowing both China and the United States to begin sharing evidence and information relating to crime and drugs," US national drug policy tsar Barry McCaffrey said. "This is an important moment and is the first legal agreement between these two great countries." Mr McCaffrey is leading a delegation that includes senior officials from the State Department, the Defence Department, Drug Enforcement Agency and coastguard. During his two days of talks in Beijing he met senior officials and discussed the mainland's growing problems with heroin and methamphetamines. He also visited a forensic laboratory of the Public Security Bureau. Joint co-operation will now include sharing "strategic drug evidence" in fighting international crime syndicates, co-operation in curbing international money laundering, and controlling the trafficking of precursor chemicals for methamphetamines, heroin and cocaine. The US also agreed to co-operate on curbing arms smuggling by drug organisations. "We also discussed the possible co-operation between the FBI and the Chinese side," Mr McCaffrey said. As a leading producer of ephedrine, a precursor for methamphetamine or the drug, "ice", the mainland has become the primary source of the ephedrine used in methamphetamine produced in Indochina, Japan, the Philippines and Thailand. Yang Fengrui, director of narcotics control at the Public Security Ministry, said he looked forward to co-operating with the US in fighting the growing domestic heroin trade originating from poppy fields in neighbouring Burma and Afghanistan. "China and the United States are not producers of heroin, but are victims," Mr Yang said. "During the Opium Wars more than 100 years ago China was victimised by drugs, we will never forget this." Co-operation between the mainland and the US in the war against drugs began in the late 1980s but picked up speed following a 1998 US-China summit. "With Mr McCaffrey's visit, co-operation on fighting drugs between China and the United States has entered into a new stage," Mr Yang said. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk