Source: Voice of America Contact: Pubdate: Tue, 9 Jun 1998 Author: Gary Thomas S.E. ASIA-DRUGS Intro: The special anti-drug session of the UN General Assembly is in its second day in New York (Tuesday). The conference is working to adopt a common strategy to fight the international narcotics trade. As correspondent Gary Thomas reports from Bangkok, southeast Asia remains a huge producer of illegal narcotics -- and gets mixed reviews for its efforts to eradicate the trade. Text: Burma's official Myanmar News Agency reported Tuesday the arrest of three suspected drug dealers near the Thai border and the seizure of more than one-million amphetamine tablets. The seizure underscores how some old patterns of narcotics trafficking are changing in southeast Asia. For years, the production of opium and heroin centered on two areas: the "golden crescent" of Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan, and the golden triangle area of Burma, Thailand, and Laos. But, according to United Nations and Thai government statistics, a new element has crept into the southeast Asian narcotics trade. As Tuesday's announced seizure demonstrates, laboratory-manufactured synthetic drugs are flowing across the border along with the traditional loads of opium and heroin. Recent reports by both the United Nations and the State Department point to a wave of stimulant manufacture and abuse -- and southeast Asia is a source of both supply and demand. Amphetamines, along with allied stimulant drugs marketed under names like "ecstasy," have become popular with young people in Asia. Thailand has estimated about 20-million amphetamine tablets are being smuggled from burma each year. This is on top of Burma's production of an estimated 60-percent of the world's heroin. Burma's military rulers have come under harsh international criticism, particularly from the United States, for allegedly not doing enough to fight the drug trade. On Monday, General Barry Mccaffrey, Director Of The White House Office Of National Drug Control Policy, said there has been no real progress on lowering the rate of drug production. The United States has worked to isolate Burma internationally for its human rights abuses and therefore has withheld any direct assistance to Rangoon for drug enforcement. Burma denies the U.S. charges, and says it is making good faith efforts to eradicate the drug trade. In a just-published pamphlet, Lieutenant Colonel Hla Min of the Burmese Government's Office Of Strategic And International Studies, lashed out at what he labels an "unreasonable refusal" by the U.S. government to recognize Burma's anti-narcotics efforts. Hla Min points out the government has made peace with the ethnic groups, such as the Shan and the Wa, that have been involved in the traditional narcotics trade in heroin and opium, and has accepted the surrender of opium kingpin Khun Sa. But, Rangoon will not turn him over to U.S. custody for trial. Some international officials apparently agree the criticism of Burma has been too harsh. The representative of the U-n International Drug Control Program in rangoon, Richard Dickins, told the Bangkok Post the tactics of isolation and pressure have been too strong, and Burma needs to be encouraged to change. He said if the pressure is too harsh, it will backfire. - --- Checked-by: Richard Lake