Pubdate: Thu, 22 Jun 2000 Source: South China Morning Post (Hong Kong) Copyright: 2000 South China Morning Post Publishers Limited. Contact: http://www.scmp.com/ Author: Mike Carlson SAR 'SHOULD BE WIPED OFF US DRUG-TRAFFICKING HIT-LIST' Hong Kong should be removed from a global "hit-list" of major illegal drug-producing and trafficking centres, according to the United States' top anti-narcotics official. US national drug policy chief Barry McCaffrey made the call yesterday after arriving here to present a cheque for US$907,084 (HK$7.1 million) in seized drug money to Secretary for Security Regina Ip Lau Suk-yee. The sum amounted to half the assets seized in a 1996 joint anti-drug operation carried out by US and SAR law enforcement agencies which smashed a massive marijuana and hashish-smuggling operation in the US. "After what I've seen here, I can strongly recommend to Secretary of State Madeleine Albright that Hong Kong be removed from the 'majors list'," Mr McCaffrey said. Last year, US President Bill Clinton unveiled a list of 26 countries deemed to be major drug producers and transit points. Hong Kong remains on the list. Mr McCaffrey - who spent several days on the mainland as part of a tour of Asia - was confident the SAR would be removed on his return to Washington. During his one-day stopover, Mr McCaffrey met high-level Customs Department and Narcotics Division officials and also toured the port inspection facilities at Kwai Chung. He arrived in Hong Kong just two days after signing a landmark agreement with mainland officials to enable the two countries to begin sharing evidence. "I am enormously encouraged by the commitment to partnership by Chinese authorities," Mr McCaffrey said, calling the occasion the beginning of the opening-up process between the law enforcement arms of the US and the mainland. He also praised Hong Kong's long tradition of co-operation with US law enforcement agencies. It was the second time assets seized in drug busts had been shared between the two countries, Mrs Ip said. "In 1998, we passed to the US Government US$2.2 million in the Chan Ching-wai case," she said. "You can count on our support to fight global drug-related crime." Chan, a fugitive drug trafficker who jumped bail in 1989, left behind $42.3 million in seized assets. Hong Kong has joined the US in more than a dozen drug investigations, resulting in the confiscation of assets in excess of $350 million. - --- MAP posted-by: greg