Pubdate: Sun, 13 May 2001 Source: Picayune Item (MS) Copyright: 2001 The Picayune Item Contact: http://www.picayuneitem.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1309 MYANMAR DRUG BURN IS MORE THAN A DOG-AND-PONY SHOW YANGON, Myanmar (AP) - Close to a billion dollars in opium, heroin and amphetamines went up in smoke Saturday as authorities in Myanmar sought to impress foreign governments and media with the seriousness of their efforts to stamp out the illicit drug trade. The destruction of seized drugs was staged to coincide with a regional meeting held to coordinate the anti-drug efforts of Cambodia, China, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam. The three-day meeting, held under the auspices of the United Nations International Drug Control Program, ended Friday, but many delegates stayed on to see Myanmar's real efforts in the field. Drug burnings have become a ritual in Southeast Asian countries, making a public relations virtue out of the necessity to dispose of the dangerous drugs. Myanmar has conducted 15 such events. On Saturday, the seized drugs were laid out along tables set end to end for about 66 feet. The drugs - including 2,862 pounds of opium, 255 pounds of heroin, 968 pounds of marijuana and 2.7 million amphetamine tablets - were mostly in their original packing: brown paper wrapping, plastic bags and jute sacks. Below the tables was gasoline-soaked wood for kindling. The total street value of the drugs in the United States would be $920 million, officials said. At each of these drug burning events, foreign drug experts are invited to test random samples. A typical program includes slicing open a bag and dropping a sample into a test solution: amphetamine turns the solution orange, heroin a shade of purple. Observers are then motioned back for the big moment. A button ignites a fire that engulfs the table, burning the packets and sending white powder spilling to the ground. The opium burns slowly, like peat. Heroin, its derivative, burns slightly faster. The marijuana burns like the dry leaves it is. Amphetamines send flames high into the air, burning fiercely with huge heat and billowing black smoke. Afghanistan and Myanmar are the top two producers of opium and heroin. Hoping to shake off its unsavory reputation, Myanmar is eager to show off its drug-fighting efforts. While Myanmar's military government has curbed opium production considerably, the country has in recent years become a major source of methamphetamine, the cheap and popular stimulant that is wreaking social havoc in several Asian nations. Police Maj. Gen. Soe Win, secretary of the Central Committee for Drug Abuse Control, said Myanmar cannot be blamed entirely for methamphetamine production because other countries supplying the raw materials have an obligation to tighten their law enforcement. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom