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Ecstacy latest drug threat in US
11/08/2000 16:31  - (SA)  

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Washington - Ecstasy is supplanting heroin and cocaine as the chief concern facing authorities in the United States, and this time the source is Europe, rather than Latin America, the traditional conduit for illegal drugs into the US.

Up to 80% of ecstasy is imported from secret laboratories in the Netherlands, with Belgium also supplying a considerable amount.

US teenagers have taken to the pills - said to produce a feeling of wellbeing and general euphoria - to such an extent that one expert is talking about a "new front in the war against illegal drugs".

Routine flights are being used to transport the illegal wares, forcing drug enforcement officials and customs to focus their attention on airports, where they have achieved some success.

Since the beginning of the year they have seized eight million ecstasy tablets, 20 times the amount confiscated in 1998. At the end of July, a new record was set in Los Angeles when 2.1 million tablets were discovered in the hold of an Air France aircraft arriving from the Netherlands.

The investigators know only a small proportion of the ecstasy smuggled in is ever found and the rest finds its way onto the streets and into the clubs of the bigger cities, like Los Angeles, New York and Miami.

The Drug Enforcement Agency sounded the alarm recently, calling a conference of experts to discuss strategies to deal with the new threat, but even the government's drug czar, Barry McCaffrey, was forced to concede that no appropriate counter to it had been found.

"We have to change," Customs Service head Raymond Kelly said. Until recently the focus had been on the southern borders of the US, "but now we must concentrate increasingly on Europe", he added.

Drug enforcement and customs staff have been increased at airports and sniffer dogs have been given intensive courses in detecting ecstasy.

In addition there is to be a five-billion-dollar publicity campaign to bring the dangers of the drug, which is dealt and used mainly at large "rave" events, to the public's attention.

These were merely stopgap measures, particularly as the well organised drug rings had now become involved in dealing in ecstasy, whereas previously smaller dealers had predominated, Kelly said.

The bigger operators had been drawn to the business by the large profit margins offered, and they had the funds, the network of middlemen and the small-time dealers to take the drug beyond the rave scene and into the small towns of the US, he added.

Young people pay up to $50 for a single pill at the raves, a huge markup on the 50 cents the dealers pay for the drug at source.

The DEA believes the smuggling has to date been controlled by an Israeli crime syndicate which hires "mules" to carry the drugs on scheduled flights.

There are no reliable estimates of the number of US teenagers experimenting with the drug or using it regularly, but the authorities regard the quantities smuggled and the switch by the big crime organisations from heroin and cocaine as an indication that there is cause for alarm.

In a recent survey 2.5 per cent of school pupils between the ages of 16 and 18 said they had taken the drug at least once in the preceding month. A year ago the comparable figure was 1.5 per cent.

US authorities are particularly concerned that many who consume the drug regard it as completely harmless.

Experts warn, however, that raised blood pressure, dehydration and palpitations are not the only effects of ecstasy, which is chemically related to mescalin and amphetamine. They fear its use could result in lasting damage to parts of the brain. - Sapa-DPA

- SAPA



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