Pubdate: Mon, 22 Jul 2002 Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) Copyright: 2002 Cox Interactive Media. Contact: http://www.accessatlanta.com/ajc/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/28 Author: Christopher Bodeen, Associated Press CHINA'S WAR ON DRUG TRAFFIC GOES PUBLIC Agents, International Collaboration Get Results Kunming, China --- In class, the students pass around hollow pineapples used to smuggle drugs, and practice their frisking techniques on a blond-wigged mannequin. This is China's next generation of anti-drug agents, training at a campus in Yunnan province in the mountainous southwest. It can seem at times almost lighthearted, but they face a daunting task. China is awash in heroin and methamphetamine, much of it coming over the country's southern border. Reeling from the influx, China has gone from hiding the problem to making it highly public. Last year, drug enforcers adopted new high-tech communications, surveillance and detection techniques. Perhaps most important, they have stepped up cooperation with China's Southeast Asian neighbors. Drug officials claim impressive results. Helped by cooperation with Myanmar, heroin seizures in southwestern China soared 163 percent in 2001 to a record 17,855 pounds, according to Sun Dahong, a senior anti-drug official. Collaboration has ''strongly frightened the drug traffickers at home and abroad and effectively checked the trafficking activities,'' Sun said. During the 1980s and '90s, drug addiction was treated as a national embarrassment, to be kept out of sight, hindering drug education efforts and cooperation with other countries. Recently, though, police have issued frank assessments of the challenge. Bai Jingfu, deputy director of the National Narcotics Control Commission, warned on June 20 that despite successes, the situation was grim. Official statistics report that numbers of known addicts rose to 860,000 by 2000, from just 70,000 at the start of the decade. Experts say the actual number of regular users probably tops 4 million; most are under age 35. While signs of drug use are rarely seen in public, heroin's effects are showing up in China's galloping rate of AIDS infection, now estimated at 850,000 victims. Most got the disease from sharing needles or poor sanitation in the blood selling business. Smugglers and dealers are routinely shot after brief trials. Addicts are packed off to labor camps or stark compulsory detoxification centers, but officials say less than 10 percent stay clean after release. Between 1990 and 2001, 125,400 pounds of drugs were seized in Yunnan, said Sun, head of the southwestern province's drug enforcement bureau. Almost 2,000 tons of chemicals used in the production of heroin and other drugs were seized, and more than 100,000 suspects arrested, he said. During that time, 32 Chinese law enforcement officers have been killed by drug traffickers and 208 injured, Sun said. Public Security Minister Jia Chunwang made a series of visits last year to sign China's first cooperative anti-drug ventures with Thailand, Myanmar and Laos --- the heroin-producing ''Golden Triangle'' of Southeast Asia --- and Vietnam. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart