From: [c--l--r] at [pinyon.libre.com] (Don Collier) Newsgroups: alt.drugs Subject: Burma Heroin News 3 of 3 Date: 22 Jun 1994 18:59:52 -0700 From: [wov central] at [wov.com] (wov central) Date: 18 Jun 94 02:52:01 +0700 Newsgroups: soc.culture.burma Subject : Drug Czar Targets Burma Heroin WASHINGTON (AP) -- The United States must "engage" Burma, the world's largest producer of opium, if it wants to curtail heroin trafficking in Southeast Asia, President Clinton's top drug policy adviser says he was told by officials in the region. However, the United States withdrew its ambassador and terminated financial assistance to Burma six years ago because of human rights violations in the country its rulers now call Myanmar. Lee Brown, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, would not say if his new anti-heroin strategy, which he expects to recommend to Clinton in another month, would seek to change that. Brown, who just returned from a trip to Hong Kong, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Laos and Japan, where he met with top anti-drug officials, said that in every country he visited, "the message was quite clear: If we're going to deal with the problem of opium in Southeast Asia, Burma has to be dealt with as well." The officials proposed no particular actions, he said, but told him that if the United States wants to control the spread of heroin, which is made from the opium poppy, "You have to engage Burma in some way." He said he was not sure how to do that, as he shares the concerns of Congress and the administration over human rights violations. However, he said, "I am responsible for addressing the issue of narcotics. What we have to do is think how we can address both concerns." The Drug Enforcement Administration does have a small office in Rangoon, Burma, said DEA spokesman Frank Shults. The DEA and Burmese authorities last year conducted three joint undercover operations leading to arrests, including those of two major drug traffickers, and the dismantling of a significant drug trafficking organization, according to the State Department's International Narcotics Control Report of April 1994. In addition, the Burmese government has declared heroin trafficker Khun Sa a criminal and has expressed a willingness to prosecute him if he is caught. The drug lord, who was called the "Prince of Death" by former Attorney General Richard Thornburgh, leads his own army. He was indicted in December 1989 in Brooklyn, N.Y. on 10 federal counts. The Burmese government has denied that a valid U.S.-Burma extradition treaty exists. According to State Department estimates, 60 percent of U.S. heroin comes from Southeast Asia, most of it from Burma, which last year produced some 2,575 metric tons of opium, a 13 percent increase over 1992. The United States ended financial assistance to Burma in September 1988, when the military ousted a civilian government and killed thousands of demonstrators. The junta held free elections in 1990, but it never let the overwhelming victors from the National League for Democracy take office. Aung San Suu Kyi, that pro-democracy party's leader who has been under house arrest since 1989, won the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize. In 1988, before the coup, Burma received $12.2 million in U.S. assistance, including $5 million in anti-narcotics aid, a State Department spokesman said. The United States has no ambassador in Burma, but maintains an embassy in Rangoon headed by a charge d'affaires. On another issue, Brown sounded much like his predecessors in the Bush administration -- William Bennett and Bob Martinez -- as he railed against Congress for cutting the president's proposed anti-drug budget. He said Congress, or one of its subcommittees working on appropriations bills, has cut $37 million from the president's request for the State Department's Office of International Narcotics Matters, $300 million from treatment of hard-core drug abusers, $30 million from a Safe and Drug-Free Schools proposal and $30 million from other drug prevention programs. * News, features and more from WOV On-Line