Pubdate: Sun, 17 Jan 2010 Source: Sunday News (New Zealand) Copyright: 2010 Fairfax New Zealand Limited Contact: http://www.stuff.co.nz/sunday-news/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5119 Author: Steve Hopkins Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) NEW METH DRUG ROCKS NZ A POWERFUL methamphetamine drug known as "crazy medicine" in Thailand has hit New Zealand's capital city. Sunday News has been told tens of thousands of Ya Ba pills arrived in Wellington late last year from the infamous Golden Triangle. The Ya Ba was imported following a major shortage in the local P market, caused by police crackdowns on dealers and gangs. More than 380 officers worked on 12 operations across the country in November and December, resulting in nearly 400 arrests and the discovery of hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of the Class A drug. Customs has also hit P production. This week, the government department revealed it intercepted more than one tonne of pseudoephedrine - the base ingredient in P - last year. The National Drug Intelligence Bureau - which includes police, customs and the Ministry of Health - was unaware of Ya Ba's arrival in Wellington. Bureau head, Detective Inspector Stuart Mills, said police had "not yet seen Ya Ba as of yet", but they had noticed an upsurge in other synthetic drugs in Wellington such as Ecstasy. "We do receive a bit of information on Ya ba periodically, but it is not widely available," he said. According to an underworld source, Ya Ba - which also contains caffeine as a base - is yet to be widely offered for sale in Wellington, but the drug syndicate behind them has started circulating them through the vice scene as cheaply as $18 a pop to build a market. "People in the know are being offered them. I think they're just sort of leaking them out and then people are going to want them. People have been saying, 'I'm over P, I want to try something new', then lo and behold, there it came," he said. The source said the pills would soon sell for $60-$70 each, something he said was a "bargain" given their strength. He said one pill would have the same effect as one to two points of P. A point of P costs $100. "For your average Joe one of them [Ya Ba] will be more than enough," he said. "It would blow their head off. And they're just so more-ish, you have it and you think 'man, I want another one'." Ya Ba use got so out of control in Thailand in the early 2000s Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra declared war on the drug, its dealers and users. Within 10 months, 2500 people were dead. Sunday News' source, who has spent more than a decade in the gang scene, said he bought seven Ya Ba tablets off a member of a drug syndicate. He said the syndicate member said of his supply: "The sky's the limit." The source said the pills, from Burma, were orange, tasted like aniseed, "smoked up a storm" when lit, and were stamped with the initials WY - Ya Ba are often embossed with those initials. The source said the pills would "kill" the P market. "It's pure methamphetamine mate ... it's better, it's cleaner ... instead of sitting around smoking a pipe all night you have a few hits of this and bang, you're away night-clubbing or whatever. "You can't sit down. If you do you'll stand straight back up." The source said Ya Ba first emerged in the gang scene in Auckland in the early 2000s, but even the hardcore criminals couldn't handle them. "It made them [the cooks and gangs] mental, it was nasty stuff."" Mills said the emergence of any methamphetamine-based drug was of concern because of what people would do on it and for it. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake