Pubdate: Mon, 7 Jul 2008 Source: Korea Times (South Korea) Copyright: 2008 Korea Times Contact: http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/916 LAX NARCOTIC CONTROL Korea's Status As Drug-Free Country Is in Danger It is alarming enough that Korea has been used as an intermediate base for an international drug trafficking ring involving Taliban insurgents. Even more shocking was none of the nation's intelligence and law enforcement agencies had known it until they were given a tip by the Pakistani government. The loose narcotic control stemming from equally lax immigration and customs checkup systems as well as the recent surge in the number of drug users in this country could deprive Seoul of its reputation as a drug-free country. According to reports, up to 50 tons of acetic anhydride, a key material for heroin, seem to have been smuggled from Japan, Singapore or other manufacturing countries to Afghanistan via Korea since April 2007. If the additional 12 tons of had reached the hands of their buyers to push up the total to 62 tons, it would have been enough to produce heroin worth $12 billion, the police said. A Taliban spokesman denied their involvement in an interview with The Korea Times, but there appears to be too much circumstantial evidence to accept the denial on face value. For most Koreans still vividly remembering the two-month-long nightmare of hostage incidents in the South Asian country last year, which ended amid rumors of Seoul paying an unspecified amount of cash to the radical terrorist group, these recent reports are like rubbing salt in the wounds. Korea has been regarded as a drug-free country, where less than 10 out of 100,000 people use narcotics. This is beginning to change, as the number of drug-related crimes here soared from 7,711 in 2006 to 10,649 last year. The recent surge in drug users and traffickers is another reminder that Korea is emerging as a drug "distribution base." It also has long enjoyed the reputation as a country with good security. The latest incident shows, however, even that may be in danger, as the Ministry of Justice and the National Intelligence Service had been left unaware that the country was being used as a pipeline for internationally restricted materials. If the drug traffickers can move into and out of this country with little to fear, the days will be numbered - or have already come - when terrorists will also do so. The report that the Taliban is mainly targeting countries that have sent their troops to Afghanistan is only deepening ordinary Koreans' concerns further. There are even suspicions among many of a link between the seeming dereliction of duty by the state intelligence agency with its resumption of domestic controls on anti-government demonstrators amid the protracted candlelit protests. Likewise, some think the Justice Ministry may be too busy investigating the background of rally organizers to focus on their original duty of protecting the people from external threats. Korea has been joining the U.S.-led war on terror abroad, but it seems to be time for Seoul turn its attention inwardly, too. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake