Pubdate: Sun, 10 Mar 1996 Source: Warsaw Voice (Poland) Contact: 64 Ksiecia Janusza St., (5th floor) 01-452 Warsaw, Poland Website: http://www.warsawvoice.com.pl/ Pubdate: Sun, 10 Mar 1996 Author: Konrad Niklewicz STOPPING DRUG TRAFFICKERS Police Hope to Make Hash of Smuggling The Ministry of Internal Affairs plans to set up a special bureau for combating drug trafficking and production. The Internal Affairs Ministry announcement of an anti-drugs task force comes on the heels of a Feb. 28 report by the United Nations' International Narcotics Control Board (INCB), which states that Poland and the Czech Republic are Central and Eastern Europe's leading producers of synthetic drugs. The INCB examines substance abuse throughout the world based on information from governments with which it cooperates. It says Polish and Czech amphetamines are popular in Scandinavia and Germany. Over the last two years, Polish police have raided six large amphetamine laboratories. Poland is also a transit country for West bound hashish, heroin and cocaine produced in Afghanistan, Morocco and Nigeria, though the INCB report notes that far fewer narcotics are available in Poland than in Western Europe. The number of people reaching for hard drugs like cocaine and ecstasy is increasing, Last year, police throughout Europe seized 10 tons of heroin and nearly 800 tons of hashish. The Polish Border Guard and police, meanwhile, confiscated more than 15 tons of hashish and more than 100 kilograms of cocaine. "Poland is part of the world narcotic production and trafficking system," the Interior Ministry's Waldemar Markiewicz said as the INCB report was being presented. "Narcotics are becoming a social problem in Poland." The INCB report also deals with drug-related crimes such as money laundering. Markiewicz admitted that Polish law enforcers still can't effectively fight money-launderers. Police and customs officers are taking part in training programs taught by European Union experts. One such program started in Gdansk on Feb. 19. British customs agents are teaching Poland's Central Board of Customs (GUC) and Border Guard employees how to combat drug smuggling by sea. The fight against drug trafficking and smuggling became a little easier last year when lawmakers set up the Polish equivalent of the U.S. Witness Protection Program and passed a new law on police entrapment. Witnesses can now testify incognito in court, and the police have more freedom in going after drug-runners. The Interior Ministry is also preparing to set up the Drug Bureau, modeled after the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency. The bureau will coordinate police, State Protection Office (UOP), customs-agent and border-guard activities. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst