Pubdate: Mon, 31 Dec 2001 Source: Deseret News (UT) Copyright: 2001 Deseret News Publishing Corp. Contact: http://www.desnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/124 CHINA ADMITS DRUG PROBLEMS BEIJING - The number of known drug addicts in China has topped 900,000, fueling crime and the spread of AIDS, state media said Monday. More than 30 percent of robberies are committed by addicts to pay for drugs, the reports said. They said two-thirds of new AIDS cases are linked to sharing of dirty needles by heroin users. The reports add to new openness about AIDS and drug abuse in China after years of official denial that neither was a serious problem. The total of 901,000 addicts known to police is up from 860,000 at the end of last year, the Xinhua News Agency and newspapers said, citing Minister of Public Security Jia Chunwang. They said 745,000 of the known addicts are heroin users. Police and customs officials will use new "high tech" means to combat drug crime, the reports quoted Jia saying without giving details. Jia said China will cooperate more closely with Myanmar and Laos - neighboring countries in the drug-producing "Golden Triangle." He said they would cooperate on drug seizures and in introducing crops to substitute for opium cultivation. China has 28,133 confirmed AIDS cases, though experts say the number of people infected is probably more than 600,000. The total number of drug traffickers caught also is rising, Xinhua said. It said police caught 67,500 between January and November - 10,000 more than all trafficking arrests in 2000. Police seized some 14.6 tons of heroin and opium, 4.6 tons of methamphetamine and almost 2 million pills of the amphetamine ecstasy, Xinhua said. China's communists nearly wiped out drug addiction after the 1949 revolution, executing traffickers and confining addicts to treatment centers. But looser social controls in the past two decades have allowed the drug trade to flourish once again, despite harsh measures to combat it. China executes traffickers found with more than 50 grams (1.75 ounces) of heroin. The news reports Monday said some 286,000 addicts were sent to mandatory drug rehabilitation centers in the first 11 months of 2001. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh