Pubdate: 26 Feb 1999 Source: Kyodo News (Japan) N. KOREA SUSPECTED OF STATE-SPONSORED DRUG TRAFFICKING WASHINGTON, Feb. 26 (Kyodo) -- The United States suspects North Korea of promoting opium cultivation and engaging in the criminal trafficking of opiates and other narcotic drugs as ''a criminal state enterprise,'' according to a U.S. report released Friday. The 1999 International Narcotics Control Strategy Report referred to North Korea in connection to the drug activities for the first time. Opium is cultivated in the northern part of North Korea, near the boarder with China, said the report prepared by the State Department. Evidence cited in the report came from news sources. The area under cultivation range is estimated at 4,200-7,000 hectares, with opium production projected at 30-44 tons annually, it said. The opium would yield 3 to 4.5 tons of heroin if refined, but none of the estimates have been confirmed, it said. The report also pointed out recent newspaper reports that North Korea has been rapidly developing the manufacturing capacity for methamphetamine. It said Russia and China are the key markets for North Korean opiates and serve as transit routes to secondary markets in Asia and Europe. ''North Korean methamphetamine is reported to have gained a large market share of the sharply expanding illicit market in Japan.'' Given the nature of the North Korean government, the deteriorating economy, the collapse of trade ties with former Socialist countries and the country's increasing isolation, there is strong reason to believe the North is involved in the production of opiates to generate hard currency, the report said. ''If we can confirm that there is illicit opium cultivation of 1,000 hectares or more, or that North Korean heroin or methamphetamine transiting North Korea significantly affects the United States, we will add North Korea to the list of major drug producing and drug transit countries,'' it said. Meanwhile, President Bill Clinton on Friday announced a list of major illicit drug producing and drug transit countries. Of the 28 nations on this year's list submitted to Congress, 22 have been certified as either fully cooperating with the U.S. or taking adequate steps to combat the illicit drug problem. Clinton denied certification for Afghanistan and Myanmar. Barry McCaffrey, the White House official in charge of drug control, said the two countries ''supply over 90% of the world's supply of opium poppy.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Mike Gogulski