Pubdate: Tue, 27 Jun 2000 Source: Seattle Times (WA) Copyright: 2000 The Seattle Times Company Contact: P.O. Box 70, Seattle, WA 98111 Fax: (206) 382-6760 Website: http://www.seattletimes.com/ Author: John Leicester The Associated Press CHINA BURNS DRUGS, SENDS DEALERS TO THEIR DEATHS BEIJING - China marked U.N. anti-drug day yesterday by executing dealers, torching narcotics and publicly acknowledging the grim inroads drugs are making among Chinese, particularly the young. Those executed included three drug traffickers from Taiwan, a Hong Kong resident, two Shanghai heroin dealers, four dealers in the northern province of Shaanxi, three farmers in China's drug-afflicted southwest, and four manufacturers of methamphetamine, the state-run Xinhua News Agency said. China also executed at least 38 drug traffickers last week. In its first policy paper on China's drug problems, the government said yesterday that the number of registered drug addicts jumped from 148,000 in 1991 to 681,000 last year. Heroin was the drug of choice for 71 percent of addicts, and 79 percent were under age 35, according to the document issued by the State Council, China's Cabinet. More recent figures have estimated the number of registered addicts at 800,000, and a senior U.S. drug-control official has quoted Chinese estimates of 3 million to 12 million total drug users, out of China's approximately 1.25 billion people. After wiping out widespread opium addiction in the first years of communist rule, the government was slow to react to a resurgence in drug use after economic reforms in the 1980s. Only recently has the government started public-awareness campaigns and appealed for international cooperation. Yesterday, authorities in the southern provinces of Fujian and Guangdong burned 2 1/2 tons of seized drugs, Xinhua said. State-run television broadcast a report about young disco-goers using the drug Ecstasy, known in China as the "head-rocking pill." Stylishly dressed women were shown shaking their heads violently to techno music. China lies on a major transit route for the 110 tons of heroin produced in neighboring Myanmar every year. In related developments Vietnam crackdown: A court yesterday convicted all 22 defendants in Vietnam's biggest case of drug trafficking, sentencing half of them to go before a firing squad. The drug syndicate is thought to have smuggled 570 pounds of heroin and 636 pounds of opium from neighboring Laos in 1992-99. Afghanistan's offer: Afghanistan's ruling Taliban movement promised yesterday to stop poppy cultivation in the world's major opium-producing country if the world helped it to revive its war-shattered infrastructure. - --- MAP posted-by: greg