Pubdate: Tue, 02 Feb 1999 Source: Kyodo News (Japan) ASIAN DRUG CONFAB AGREES ON DATABASE, TRAINING TOKYO, Feb. 2 (Kyodo) -- Japan and six other Asian countries agreed during the first day of a two-day antinarcotics conference in Tokyo on Tuesday to consider creating a database for improving capacities to profile the illicit manufacturing and distribution of drugs. The countries at the Asia Drug Law Enforcement Conference agreed to ''examine the possibility of creating a database with the results of drug analysis and establishing a network of drug profiling,'' they said in a communique issued after Tuesday's session. The countries also agreed to promote professional training and education related to drug analysis and identification for drug law enforcement officers, the communique said. Participants in the conference, which is discussing ways to stop illegal drug production in Cambodia, China, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam, warned against the increasingly severe drug problem in East Asia. The countries welcomed a new project proposed by the U.N. International Drug Control Program (UNDCP) to ''develop and expand the operational effectiveness of law enforcement authorities across and along borders of countries in the Greater Mekong Sub-region,'' which includes the ''Golden Triangle'' drug producing area. The project is scheduled from this year to 2003. The Japanese government will extend financial and technical support to the UNDCP project and dispatch experts to help improve drug and precursor identification and testing. Takeshi Noda, chairman of the National Public Safety Commission supervising police departments across the country, said in an opening speech that Japan is concerned about the growing illegal production of amphetamine stimulants in the six countries. ''Japan will support the six countries in dealing with the drug problem, in cooperation with the UNDCP,'' Noda, who is also home affairs minister, said. Japan has an estimated 2.18 million amphetamine abusers, according to the National Police Agency (NPA). The conference, hosted by the NPA and the Foreign Ministry, is being held in the wake of the U.N. General Assembly's special meeting last June that adopted resolutions aimed at reducing illegal trade in drugs over the next 10 years. The United States, Italy, Sweden and five other countries as well as the European Union are attending the meeting as observers. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck