Pubdate: Wed, 09 May 2001 Source: Agence France-Presses Copyright: 2001 AFP Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1128 SIX ASIAN NATIONS BEGIN ANTI-DRUG TALKS IN YANGON Senior officials from six Asian nations Wednesday began mapping out strategies to improve cooperation in the war against drugs, against the backdrop of a brewing row between Thailand and Myanmar over the illicit trade. Representatives from Cambodia, China, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam are holding preparatory talks before their home ministers meet on Friday to approve new inititives to close down the narcotics industry. The Myanmar hosts will then torch mountains of heroin and methamphetamines on Saturday in a ceremonial burning. But even as the officials completed a round of bilateral talks and began evaluating the progress of cross-border drug control projects, fresh salvos were being fired in a months-long wrangle between Thailand and Myanmar. The neighbours have been trading accusations over who is responsible for rampant drug trafficking along the border since February, when rival ethnic militias in the region sparked a rare clash between the national armies. Renewed fighting has flared up in recent days as the Thai military attempts to dislodge the Yangon-allied United Wa State Army -- widely accused of being deeply involved in the drugs trade -- from a position it took on Thai soil. Myanmar's ruling junta Wednesday lashed out at Thailand for helping the rival Shan State Army (SSA) overrun Myanmar border outposts, saying it was giving succour to drug dealers. "Regretfully, all these groups are now being given sanctuary and refuge inside Thailand ... Thailand is being unbelievably quick and active in defending these groups as freedom fighters cum drug busters," it said. Meanwhile, Thailand's minister attending the meeting, Thamarak Issarangkun Na Ayutthaya, said he would press Myanmar to agree to three-way cooperation with China on drugs suppression. "Tripartite cooperation is necessary. If the three countries exchange information, the problem will be solved easily," he said. Thamarak said he would be careful to acknowledge Yangon's anti-narcotics efforts, but "Myanmar must show that they are not involved with amphetamines so that the drugs problem can be solved successfully." The six nations attending this week's talks are signatories to a 1993 agreement which bound them to work together in the war on drugs by reducing demand, boosting law enforcement and encouraging crop substitution. They meet at a ministerial level every two years to evaluate the progress of cross-border drug control projects and to approve new initiatives devised by the United Nations Drug Control Program (UNDCP). The United States has played an increasingly important role in the regional fight against trafficking through its support of Thai anti-drugs units and cooperation with Myanmar in cross-border investigations. A Bangkok-based representative for the US Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), William Snipes, said this week's meetings would boost cooperation in combatting the drug problem that has spread throughout Southeast Asia. "There has to be cooperation. These bilateral meetings are important. The drug problem is a regional problem," he said. "We're not going to be as effective (by ourselves) as we could be (working together)." Snipes said that while this week's high-level meetings were a step in the right direction, cooperation also needed to reach down to street-level investigations. "At the DEA, we would like to see regional cooperation on a working level also. We're trying to organize a working meeting ... for investigators," he said. UNDCP officials have said that during this week's meeting they will present two new anti-narcotics projects -- on cross-border law enforcement cooperation and drug control advocacy and capacity strengthening in East Asia. The second project "aims to present a common strategy for raising awareness about the danger of drugs in the region and (to help) governments produce public information materials and campaigns," an official said. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager