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 An Ariana Media Publication 07/30/2010
 Russia illegal drug trade worth $15 billion a year

Reuters
02/17/2006
By Guy Faulconbridge

[Printer Friendly Version]

MOSCOW - Russia's illegal drugs trade has topped $15 billion a year as criminal groups flood the country with heroin from Afghanistan, a senior official from the national drugs control agency said on Thursday.

Drug use has soared since the fall of the Soviet Union, with Russians becoming major consumers of illegal drugs trafficked by well-organised gangs, including synthetic drugs from Europe as well as heroin from Afghanistan.

"In Russia the narcotics business is estimated to be worth $15 billion a year: some say more, some say less, but it is actually likely to be bigger," Vladimir Zubrin, deputy director of the Federal Drugs Control Service, told a news conference.

The estimate, one of the highest yet from a Russian drugs official, means the illicit drug trade is probably bigger than the profit made by the country's biggest company, Gazprom, whose 9-month profit was about $8 billion.

Criminal groups launder the drug money through banks and financial instruments and then invest in a variety of assets at home and abroad, Zubrin said.

Opium from the poppy fields of Afghanistan is refined into heroin and then smuggled through Central Asia to Russia, using the "northern route" through Tajikistan, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan.

"The biggest problem for us is the heroin coming from Afghanistan to Russia," Zubrin said.

"Last year there was another good harvest of opium in Afghanistan ... and a significant part of that heroin came to Russia via the northern route."

HEROIN FLOW INCREASES

He said the heroin flows had increased since Russian troops last year stopped patrolling the 1,340 km (835 mile) border between Afghanistan and Tajikistan, which asked Russia in 2004 to pull out its troops.

Russia started patrolling the border more than 100 years ago when Tajikistan was a colony of the Russian empire, and continued doing so after the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991.

Russia's drug agency will also open an office in Kabul this year, Zubrin said.

Widespread intravenous drug use in Russia has helped the spread of illnesses like HIV/AIDS and boosted crime rates, according to drug officials.

The number of drug-related deaths is rising, with about 100,000 deaths from drugs last year, up from 70,000 the year before, he said.

"This is a scary figure," he said. "Over recent years the number of deaths from overdoses has sharply increased."

Russia probably has 5-6 million drug users out of a population of 143.5 million, he said, though the figure could be larger.

In Afghanistan, one kg of raw opium could fetch $180 last year, while one kg of heroin costs about $60,000 on the streets of Moscow. Last year, the drugs agency seized about 1,600 tonnes of heroin, he said.



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