Pubdate: Sat, 24 Apr 2004 Source: Bangkok Post (Thailand) Copyright: The Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd. 2004 Contact: http://www.bangkokpost.co.th/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/39 Author: Anucha Charoenpo TAX EXEMPTIONS FOR GOODS UNDER DRUG SWAP SCHEME Laos Wants Thai Help Along Border Thailand, Burma, China, India and Laos have agreed on the need for tax exemptions for goods and agricultural products made under development projects in Burma and Laos, launched to substitute narcotic drug production. The decision was made at an international meeting on cooperation against drugs, with China and India considered the most likely potential markets for those products. Rassamee Wisthawes, deputy secretary-general of the Office of the Narcotics Control Board, who led the Thai delegation, said the tax exemptions would help those goods and products compete with locally-made ones. Drug authorities from Thailand, China and India agreed to consider waiving tax altogether. Thailand has put 40 million baht into the Yong Kha alternative development project in a Wa-controlled area in Burma's Shan state. The project, which started two years ago, aims to boost income for the Wa people so they stay away from opium cultivation and drug production. Alternative development projects in Laos are sponsored by China. Lao drug authorities have asked their Thai counterparts to start similar projects along the Vietnamese-Lao border. Ms Rassamee said Thailand planned to expand alternative development projects to other parts of Burma, an idea welcomed by Pol Col Hkam Awng, the Burmese joint secretary of the Central Committee for Drug Abuse Control. The Burmese authorities called on the international community to lift economic sanctions. The meeting also agreed on the control of ketamine, a psychotropic substance used as an anaesthetic in surgical operations. Young people also abuse the drug in nightclubs, and Thailand is urging controls. The meeting will ask the International Narcotics Control Board to add ketamine to its list of controlled drugs and psychotropic substances. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake