JPRS ID: 10595 WORLDWIDE REPORT NARCOTICS AND DANGEROUS DRUGS

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CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4
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APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY JPRS L/ 10595 17 June 1982 ~T N W~~rldwide Re ort p NARCOTICS A1~1D DANGEROUS DRUGS ~FOUO 27/82) Fg~$ FOREIGN BROADCAST IN~ORMATION SERVICE ~ FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 NOTE - JPRS publications contain information primarily from foreign newspapers, periodicals and books, but also from news :~gency transmissions and broasicasts. Materials from foreign-language sources are translated; those from English-language sources are transcribed or reprinted, with the original phrasing and other characteristics retained. Headlines, editorial reports, and material enclosed in brackets are supplied by JPRS. Processing indicators such as [Text] or [ExcerptJ in the first line of each item, or following the last line of a brief, indicate how t~~e original information was processed. Where no processing indicator is given, the infor- mation was summarized or extracted. Unfamiliar names rendered phoneticalYy or transliterated are enclosed in parentheses. Words or names preceded by a ques- tion mark and enclosed in parentheses were not clear in the original but have been supplied as appropriate in context. Other unattributed parenthetical notes with in the body of an item originate with the source. Times within items are as given by source. The contents of this publication in no way represent the poli- cies, views or at.titudes of the U.S. Government. COPYRIGHT LAWS AND REGULATIONS GOVERNING OWNERSHIP OF MATERIALS REPRODUCED HEREIN REQUIRE THAT DISSEMINATION OF THIS PUBLICATION BE RESTRICTED FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY. APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02109: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 JPRS L/10595 17 June 1982 - WORLDWIDE REPORT NARCOTICS AND DANGEROUS DRUGS (FOUO 27/82) CONTENTS ASIA BURMA Brief s Opium Seized in Pegu 1 PHII,IFPINES Dogs Used in Anti-Drug Drive (M. Silva; PHII,IPPINES DAILY EXPRESS, 18 May 82) 2 Advantages of Drug Detecting Dogs Noted - (Editorial; PHIZIPPINES IlAILY E%PRESS, 20 May 82)...... 3 Briefs Marihuana Plantations Raided 4 SINGA,.PORE - Briefs Opium Seized From Burmese Ship 5 SftI LANKA National Narcotics Control Board Secretariat Opened (Peter Balasuriya; THE ISLAND, 12 May 82) 6 Sri Lanka Warned on Transmitting Drugs (DAIZY NEWS, 18 May 82) 7 St'ern Measures for Foreign Drug Dealers (Peter Balasuriya; THE ISI.AND, 7 May 82) 8 - a - [III - WW - 13~ FOUO] FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102109: CIA-RDP82-00850R400504070041-4 Drug Abuse PrEVention Plan Drafted ; (DAILY NEWS, 12 May 82) 9 Bx'ief s Airport Surveillance Up 10 Narcotics Board Headquarters 10 THAII~AND Khun Sa Attempts To Bargain With RTG Noted - (SIAM RAT SAPPADA WICHAN, 16 May 82) 11 Drug Dealing Diplomat Controversy IJiscussed (SIAM ftAT SAPPADA WICHAN, 16 May 82) 11~ Heroin Mailorder Scheme Reported . (MATICHON, 2!~ Apr 82) 17 Columnist Hits Singapore as Source of Chemical (Pricha Kunpricha; DAO SIAM, 3 May 82) 18 Prosecutors Told To Stiffen Control of Drug Cases (DAO SIAM, 3 May 82) 20 Briefs Italian Arre~ted T~'ith Heroin 21 Heroin Seized After Chase 21 Arrests Follow Heroin Seizure 21 Acetic Anhydride Shortage 22 CANADA Cocaine Seized in Drug Roundup; Nine Charged (THE VANCOWER SiTN, 12 May 82) 23 Briefs Drug Cache Seized 2!~ Trafficker Jailed 21~ LATIN AMERSCA COLOMBIA Drug Traffickers Kill Indians (Walter Martinez; EZ TIEMPO, 28 Apr 82) 25 Briefs Cocaine Confiscated 26 - b - APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R440500070041-4 ~ GUYANA Brief s Seizure of Marihuana 27 MEXICO ' Bri ef s Heroin, Cocaine Confisc I~ad txrume t~x~ he will be cushioned tAus .:wid. permissi~c. cx~ping Uic I~arJ~ realiti� ~ �'Childrcn ha~c been leli uf life. IO :l ~l)~IIM\~ NIItYC plO~llc iu ~ow ilirii wiW ~~at. ia ��Hr migh~ hua~s hi~ h~vc txcu mlliciccl by ~I~c cxce~. ~v nmrh Iha~ ~rrni+ and arcu.c ihem of _ panc. uf hune~~ arising Jisciplinc ha~ more ur Ic~. ~ng hia+ccl and la~ from unemploymer.l, vanished in mo~~ familic.. ~~~~fficinu. .muR�ling tx�.�umc. Uic ��li i. ihcrclurc nui �r ���Cunaeyucml~, hc wi~uld ardcr ul ~hr Ja~ . Nonder to uc yuung peuplr ~ furced Iu de+cri hi+ hamc Th~. wa~ .ia~rr by an old hcro�NUr.hipio~ ani~i. whu and idlc in ~hr s~reci~..� man Nhu rlaimrc ~hai mu.i are ~aiJ w bc diain aJuh. wIJ iflrLat drin{,. ~moArn. CSO: 5300/5768 37 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R440500070041-4 GREECE " BRIEFS FRENCH HEROIN SMUGGLERS CONVICTID--In separate cases, a court in the northern Greek town of Komotini has sentenced a Yugoslav and a French couple to long jail terms for attempting to smuggle Turkish heroin worth more than six million dollars into Greece, a police spokesman said. The spokesman said Perez Attia, a 27-year-old metal-worker and his sister Hanna, 31, both French citizens of Israe~i origin, (no hometown available), were jailed for 20 years on Thursday. Customs officials at the Kastania border crossing found 27 kilograms (59 pounds) of heroin valued at five million dollars concealed in their car. The court also sentenced Sancakli Hamdi, a 45-year-old Yugoslav restauranteur resident in Vienna to 15 years for entering Greece with seven kilograms (15 pounds) of heroin valued at 1.3 million dollars stashed under the windshield of his car. Hamdi also was arrested after a customs search at Kastania. [Text] [NC052152 Athens ATHENS NEWS in English 5 Jun 82 p 4 NC~ ITALIAN HEROIN TRAFFICKERS ARRESTED--From the Ministry of Finance~it was announced that agents dealing with the pursuit of customs violators arrested at the Evros customs station two Italia~n citizens, Peton Armando and Lorentzana Barotti, for attempting to smuggle into Greece 1,200 grams of heroin valued at 12,000,000 drachmas. The heroin had been meticulously hidden in the motorcar airvent. [TextJ [Athens ATHENS NEWS in English 5 Jun 82 p 4 NC] CSO: 5300/5412 38 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 ITALY OVERVIEW OF ILLICIT NARCOTICS ACTIDITIES Rome L~UMANITA in Italian 20-22 Apr 82 /20 Apr 82 p 37 [Article by Fabio Scaramucci: "Trip to the Drug Planet, 1] [Text] The problem of a few has become a mass tragedy. Heroin victims have multiplied from year to year. - A phenomenon that requires the commitment of everyone in order to obtain a reversal. Minister of Interior Rogxioni recently said that the drug phenomenon in Italy is now more disquieting, more dangerous, and more deep rooted than terrorism. That is why the government has decided to cambat it at all levels, since it considers drugs to be one of the greatest dangers with respect to the distortion and regression of Italian societq. The figures, in addition to being valuable in other respects, speak clearly. From 1973 to the present, there~has been a steady and striking increase in drug mortality. The single victim recorded in 1973 was followed by 8 in 1974, 26 in 1975, 31 in 1976, 40 in 1977, 62 in 1978, 129 in 1979, 208 in 1980, and 230 in 1981. And these are only the official figures, which do not include those of drug deaths that are not known because they are recorded in reports _ that speak vaguely of cardiac and circulatory disease, of viral hepatitis, inexplainable road accidents, or suic3des during periods of obvious absten- tion. But how did things get to this level? The drug calamity started to take shape in our country in 1970. One set of statistics shows that there were about 500 drug addicts in Rame (none of the~m heroin addicts), all less than 26 years old. But already in 1975 this reality had radically changed. There was talk in Rome of 1,000 persons addicted to "heavy" drugs, while in Italy as a whole there were probably 6,000. Thus, in 5 years the nature of drug dependency had changed substantially. Around 1970 the most widely distributed drug was hash~sh, followed at a distance by mari- huana. That is, we were still in the field of "light" drugs. ~ 39 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R440500070041-4 $ut this ~ituation did not last long~ While in 1972 the distribution of amphetamines was alreadq a big phenomenon, it did not take long for the "new J stuff" to~appear. First came morphine and then, toward the end of 1974, came heroin, the lethal "white death" that decimated young lives. Distributors carefully chose sample citi~es for their "launches"--and from Milan, Turin, Genoa, Livorno, and Rame came the second phase of drug dependency. It seems that at first distributors offered heroin completely free of charge, but it is definitely known that in Milan, in December 1974, a dose (40 percent _ pure) cost about 10,000 lire, an attractive price. However, it took a couple of years more for the phenomenon, which in the meantime had spread like an oil stain, to reach its present tragic dimensions. But it is now a fact. In big cities, the distribution of heroin exceeds the gloomiest of predictions. At the s~e time--but certainly not by chance-- amphetamines and "light" drugs are disappearing little by little fram the market. Distributors are multiplying and now the most conspicuous person is the victim, himself, the drug addict, forced to become a distributor in order to obtain money for his own drugs. Deaths are beginning to be counted, increasingly numerous and to a great eztent of very yo~ing persons. It is estimated that there are at least 100,000 users of opiates today in Italy, while speaking conservatively at least 600,000 persons more or less consistently use "light" drugs. But there are also tho3e who speak of a million drug addicts, young people in particular, fram 11 to 25 years of ag~, whose average age wnfortunately is decreasing. Taking, for example, the 436 official drug victims recorded from 1977 to 1980, it is noted that until 1978 the deaths were included in the 18-25 year old . group (63.3 percent), and the 26-40 year old group (36.7); while from 1979 on, the phenomenon extended to other ages, both older and younger, with a much ~ higher incidence for those younger than 18. Thus, in 1980, 4.3 percent of the victims were younger than 18 and 1.5 percent older than 40. Still in that ' year, out of 208 deaths, 182 were mal~s, but the percentage of deaths for females younger than 18 was 15.4 percent, compared ~rith 2.7 percent for males. The same was recorded in the over 40 group. Women represented 7.7 per.cent, com- pared with 0.6 percent for men. Thus, in a short time drug addiction changed from the problem of a few to a mass tragedy. Because of the enormous n~mmber of young people involved, because of the power of drugs to ranage phycho-physical integrity and the social and moral behavior of entire generations, because of the waste of resources con- nected with the use of drugs, it is a question of a phenamenon that assumes specific political, social, and cultural importance. It requires the commitment ~ of everyone in order to attain a reversal. -J 40 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 /21 Apr 82 p 37 [Article by Fabio Scaramncci: "Trip to the Drug Planet, 2"] [Text] Heroin abo~ands in big cities, but also in small loc~lizies, and in vacation spots. Organized crime controls drug trafficking, with enormous profits. In recent days, during the course of a big s~mit meeting of magiszrates, poli- ticians, and police of.ficers, striking figures on the distribution of drug~ in Rome were made lmown. They were collected by the Drug Squad of the _ Solicitor's Office in 2 years of full-time activity in this field. In the capital 20 kilos of cocaine and as many of heroin are secretly sold daily to meet the demand of at least 70,000 drug addicts, with a wholesale "turnover" of about 2 and 1/2 billion lire. On the other hand, magistrates of the SoZicitor's Office said that it is impossible to furnish precise data on the distribution of "light" drugs, since the use of hashish and of marihuana "is so generalized that Rome is literally inundated with them." Thus, in Rome there are at least 40,000 young heroin addicts; but these preoccu- pying levels are certainly characteristic also of other big Italian cities, such as Milan, Turin, or Naples. However, the drug phenomenon is no l~nger limited to big urban settlements. In fact, beginning with 1979, many small centers--in particular, vacation spots--have exceeded every forecast in the matter of drug sales. Mass tourism of course is among the causes of the spreading of the phenomenon in bathing resorts. At most beaches in ~the s~mer there is now an enormous availability of heroin, supplied not only by the usual - venders, but also by Italian and foreign tourists who pay for their vacations through the sale of drugs. Along all Italian shores, the market has become very prosparous. i:t is esti- - m~ted that last summer, on the Adriatic coast alone, the quantities of drugs _ sold were much greater than the annual consumption in big cities. The same phenomenon was ascertained at all of the beaches on the Tuscan coast, where ~ the drug problem, which in winter is relatively contained, assumea particular _ virulence in summer. The traffickers, from the clearing bases at GrosePto and Massa, supply the market with an abundance of drugs, to meet the increa Q in aemand. However, Pesaro on the Adriatic, Naples and Salerno on the ~yrrhenian Sea, Sanremo and Ventimiglia on the Ligurian Sea, still constitute the biggest bases from which heroin radiates to vacationers. A particular reference to the drug market increase in smaller centers should be made in the case of Verona. Out of a population of 270,000 inhabitants, there are more than 10,000 drug addicts. This means that percentage-wise, this city of the Scala family can truly be characterized as the drug capital of our country. Heroin comes to Verona directly from tlie Middle East (by sea or on board the TIRs, and the i~ense quantities on the market cost less and are 41 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 purer; they contain 20-30 percent heroin, comp2red with 5-6 percent on the Rome "market." Daily consumption has reached 3 kilos of heroin, 90 kilos a month, valued at 27 billion lire. Taking 15,000 lire as the base price of a dose, it is without doubt one of the lowest in Italy. It is well known that the biggest existing crime organizations are behind this enormous drug trafficking. In Rome--as the magistrates of the Solicitor's Office emphasized--the traffickf.n~ of cocaine can be traced back to South _ American criminality, to the Neapolitan Camorra [Neapolitan secret organization], and to the Calabrian 'ndrangheta; heroin, on the contrary, is controlled by the Sicilian mafia and, to a lesser degree, by Arab criminality. However, the mafia exerts an undisputed leadership in the control of trafficking, not only with respect to the national market, but also the foreign one (West Germany, the United States, Canada), with tremendous proceeds. It is enough to realize that the proceeds of annual drug sales has been estimated at 20,000 billion lire in Sicily alone. Just to get an idea of the enormous profit realized by the criminal organizations - that control the production and trafficking of dxugs, one must realize that to _ obtain one kilo of heroin in a well-equipped laboratory (and in Sicily no less that 7 were discovered in recent months), 850 grams of morphine are needed; while to obtain one kilo of basic morphine, 10 kilos of opium are usually needed. At present 10 kilos of opium cost the trafficker about 800,000 lire, but the full kilo of heroin that can be obtained from it, once fractionated and dis- tributed on the international market, can amount to something like 1 billion lire. It is thus a question of the most gigantic criminal speculation ever carried out in any sector. It has induced big crime to definitively abandon other classic channels of support: prostitution, illicit gambling, the smuggling of cigarettes. /22 Apr 82 p 37 [Article by Fabio Scaramucci: "Trip to the nrug Planet, 3"] [Text] Italy has become an international drug trafficking crossroad. In the face of a phenomen~n of such proportions, the ways and means of transporting the "stuff" are varied. Drugs start with the cultivation of poppies, from which opi~ is derived, the main economic support of some countries. The biggest producers of opiwn are India, the Asian "golden triangle" (Thailand, Burma, and Laos), Pakistan, , Afghanistan, Iran, and the Soviet Union, but the material that is trafficked is distributed on the international market, in order of importance, from the "gold triangle," India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Mexico. 42 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-04850R000504070041-4 _ The most impartant world distribution routes of the bulk of the drugs are the "golden triangle"--Hong Rong--the United States, the Turkish-Russian (which transports drugs fram the Middle East to the United States, through Franee), and the Turkish-Slavic-G~rman, bq land, through Italy. However, drugs arrive in our country for the most part from Holland, Monaco (one of the transit routes), Afghanistan, and Thailand. The ways and means of transporting the "stuff" are varied, but recently "couriers" have resorted with greater frequency to using suitcases with false - bottoms. They have also tried to import drugs by concealing quantities in - pictures, statues, or on themselves, in the heels of shoes, or even in their intestines (in small containers placed in the rectum). In the face of a phenomenon of such proportions and scope, police forces every- where find themselves in great difficulty. Our police force for its part is doing all it can. According to the figures of the anti-drug administrative department of the Ministry of Interior, 15,225 persons were involved in drugs - in 1981 (compared with 14,222 in 1980). Of these, 9,477 were denounced for the trafficking and sale of drugs, or other drug-connected offenses (there were 7,783 in 1980); 2,500 were found to be in possession of drugs; and 3,349 were = declared to be users. In absolute terms, the monthly average of th~se who were denounced was notably greater compared with the preceding year: 790 in - 1981 compared with 648 in 1980. The n~ber of kilograms of drugs confiscated last year by the police, carabineers, and customs officers was 11,437, an increase of more than 109 percent campared with 1980. Without ~oubt it is a question of brilliant operation5, but which unfortunately have an impact on only the base (the "couriers") and the ad3acent, non-carrying structures (sellers-drug addicts) of the trafficking pyramid, while t.he top levels remain in the shadow. It must be remembered, in fact, that the drug - phenomenon has a great crime potential, not only because it fina~nces and sus- tains the most dreadful of international "gangs," but also because it leads drug addicts to crime when in search of money needed for their "debt." It is not for nothing that the magistrates of the Solicitor's Office of Rome have stated that about 80 percent of the thefts and robberies committed in the capital and in neighboring areas are carried out by drug addicts. The d?-ug "circuit" thus produces all kinds of crimes. In a short time, chiefly because of its particular geographic location and its coastal development, Italy has become an important internationa~. drug trafficking crossroad. Because of its extreme seriousness (official estimates speak of at least 100,000 drug addicts, and of 400 deaths a year, but it is well known that = the hidden reality is even more preoccupying), the drug phenomenon has beceme such a great political problem that it has induced the government to assume a responsibility. Minister Rognoni announced that a plan for intervention in various sectors will be unplemented and that it will be articulated along four strategic lines. 43 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500074041-4 First, a eultural comanitment is enviaioned, and a co~itment to obtain the knowledge�needed to closely prob~ all aspects of the problem; then, a co~nitment to fight hard against the criminal circuit that prospers on drugs; finallq, a thorough means of sensitization of pub.lic opinion, on the one hand, and of the organization of pertinent agencies, on the other. The customs officers, for their part, have recently concluded a camplete study of the sub~ect, in which some financial, penal, and administrative measures are suggested, in order to stimulate the anti-drug fight in our country. Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Costa, on the other hand, has proposed that a network of Italian investigators be established in countries from which the drugs that are destined for our maxket emanate, in order to block the trafficking of drugs at their source. The Foreign Affairs, Health, and Finance ministries are working on this plan. Their intention is to equip anti-drug offices with specialized personnel, to be supported by embassies and consulates, in about 20 countries where the greatest quantity of opium, coca, and canabis is produced. In short, 1982 should be the year for anti-drug mobilization. But to break this spiral that is becoming more tragic with each day, a commitment will be needed _ from everyone, because drugs no longer are the private affair of a few. They _ cut deeply into the social fabric and very life of the country. - 8255 . CSO: 5300/2299 44 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 ITALY MORE STRESS ON SOCIAL ASPECTS OF ANTI-DRUG PLAN NEEDED - Rome AVANTI in Italian 27 Apr 82 p 8 ~Article by Alvaro Benedetti: "Psychologists and Sociologists in Combatting Drugs"~ ~Text] There is one "point" in the government's plan for combatting drugs, presented during the past few days by Interior Minister Rognoni, that is very interesting, but not treated in sufficient depth, at least as presented. TY.is was the point about psychological and social treatment of the drug dependent after detoxification; a process which doctors and experts agree should be maintained as one of the basic opportunities within the overall strategy toward achieving the breaking of the drug dependency phenomenon, obviously in combination with the strategies of combatting smuggling, education, preventive measures among youth, and publi~ enlightenment. Therefore, one of the four guiding principles for implementation of the plan, which, it should be remembered, was prepared by the Ministry of the Interior with the close cooperation of the Health Department, is a"cul- tural and informational commitment" by the governmen~t to explore the drug problem more fully in all its aspects, and, internally; to review "the quality and quantity of the public and private institutional response in the areas of prevention and treatment of drug dependency." This is the point we find interesting: this is the new aspect. The govern- ment, convinced until yesterday that the drug problem could be dealt with and resolved solely by massive measures to combat smuggled goods, wholesale or retail, and, more recently, also with the medical approach based on methadone and morphine, has now come around to proposing new initiatives, for example, some kind of education pr~gram for youth in the schools and barracks. Now, finally, the government has reached what we may call the third stage, and has approved the plan, which is described as offering hope of providing an overall response to a serious problem. Therefore, there is to.be not only an intensified combat of smuggling, in- crease in the educational campaign, and more thorough enlightenment of the public--all, whether or not directly affected at this time--on the "problem," but also intensive work on the psychological and social level. ~ 45 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102109: CIA-RDP82-00850R400504070041-4 Thus, alongside the work of the law enforcement organizations and the doctors, there will be a greater role for the psychologists, physchoanalysts, and social aides, who are, we repeat, the only ones capable of bringing to a success~ul conclusion the work begun by the doctors, i.e., to psychologically heal the~drug dependent, and convince him that he can "live without drugs"; and reeducate him to live with himself and others in the reality of daily life (school, work, conduct, esthetic appreciation, value of money etc.), in summary, to put him back in society. However,tlie public organizations best able to perform this delicate and determining role do not in fact exi~L, or rather there are some, but in very limited number, and most of them operating on meager resources. There are, on the other hand, a considerable number of the so-called "communities," most of which have shown good results. However, strange as it may seem, nobody knows exactly how many there are and where exactly they are located. The map showing them is notable for its outline character, and notes that the s ituation is in constant change. How- ever, by deciding to tackle the drug problem also on the psychological and social level, the government in the person of the minister of health has con- ducted an information survey of these "communities," both to determine the number and location, and to study the structure, methods of operation, results achieved, and experience developed. A few months ago the minister of health assigned this research project to the "Abele Group" study center with headquarters in Turin. It specializes in maladaptive behavior, and should come up with a picture of the real situa- tion, though that is subject to rapid variations. In Italy there are about a hundred "communities," but only 27 are devoted _ to drug dependents and alcoholics; the others are open also to other youths who are maladaptive for various reasons. , These "communities" are spread widely over the country in smaller or larger concentration depending on the extent of the drug phenomenon in the various areas: about 75 percent in the north, 20 percent in the center, and the remaining 5 percent in the south and the islands. They have developed in various environments: 40 in the country, 35 in the city, and 25 in semirural areas; only 35 describe themselves as treatment centers, the others call themselves "communities of service, of life" and other purposes. Overall, these "communities" can shelter 1,500 people, most of whom are between 18 and 25 years old. Ninety percent of the communities were tlie result of private volunteer activity, and only about 7 percent were set up by local institutions. Overall, there are some 400 social-health workers serving in the communities, about 40 of whom are former drug dependents. 46 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 As for the most difficult problem, which they have to face virtually every day, the matter of financing, half of these "communities" live off private ~ contributions or their own work (agriculture, handicrafts, and other), and - only four are f inanced entirely by public organizations. The remaining 46 receive both public and private contributions, and of them all only 10 per- cent request payment directly by the families of youth being sheltered. Those "communities" are said to be able to handle about 1,500 young people, and this means that despite their best intentions and the beneficial work that they do with the totally disinterested contribution of several hundred social- health workers, they are not capable, and perhaps never will be capable, to respond to the psychological and social needs of more than 100,000 drug dependents, particularly the 40,000 heroin addicts. Thus, it is the state that will have to take action, on a large scale, to establish specialized organizations. A while ago the exalted minister of health affirmed that his ministry spends annually 2 billion of his 26 billion budget on combatting drugs. However, as Beria D'Argentine, chairman of the - judges association, so aptly observed, the point to examine is whether these billions are being spent in the best way. 9920 CSO: 5300/2297 47 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 NORWAY DRUG OVERDOSE DEATHS TIED TO HEROIN GANG3 IN MIDDLE EAST Oslo ARBEIDERBLADET in Norweg ian 8 May 82 p 11 [Article by Petter Nome] [Text] A routine m istake by one of tine narcotics syndicates in the Middle East--this is the probable reason why four yr~ung drug users died of overdoses in Oslo last week. The extremely strong heroin never should have reached the market. The drugs - must be of "high quality" and not too strong--this is the motto of the drug _ syndicates. In this way, the customers live longer. According to all indications, this motto is being followed. "In Germany the number of drug-related deaths has been reduced by half in a few years--from ov er 600 per year to 'only' 300 to 400," said Helge de Fine, a Norwegian police off icer with Interpol's narcotics section in Paris. More Addicts "This is not becau se the market and drug abuse have declined. On the contrary," de Fine said. "But those who process the drugs have gained considerable skill. They carefully monitor the additives to be sure they are not poisonous and they see to it that only 'cut' heroin reaches the street market." '"hus, all indications are that the extremely strong heroin that took the "lives of four young drug abusers in Oslo in 1 week had slipped through the quality controls. The drug was 70 to 80 percent pure. Normally it is about 20 percent pure. ~ "There are no indications that parts of the same shipment have reached other European countries," de Fine said. "The overdoses in Oslo must be due to chance." The "Golden Cresc en t" Neither de Fine nor investigators in Norway know where the deadly heroin came from or how large the shipment was. It is believed, however, that it accidently escaped detection in routine quality controls at one of the drug factories in 48 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500074441-4 the Middl~ East. Ninety pexcent of the heroin con~iscated in Europe comes from the "Golden Crescent,"`the region from Pakistan in the east to the Mediterranean Sea and Turkey in the west. The drugs are ref ined in this same region by several _ independent cr iminal organizations. Maf ia Previously, the European market was dominated by the Italian Maf ia with drugs from the "Golden Triangle" (Southeast Asia). After lying low for several years, the Maf ia ilow seems to be involved more and more in the production and sale of narcotics. Since 197[omission] this ruthless organization has reestablished laboratories in southern Europe. The d~ugs pr_oduced here go pr imar ily to the Amer ican market . 933 6 CSO: 5300/2296 49 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500074441-4 NORWAY TRIAL BEGINS; MAN ACCUSED OF SMUGGLING HASHISH FROM MOROCCO Oslo AFTENPOSTEN in Norwegian 27 May 82 p 5 [Article by Helge Sorensen] [Text] The main hearing continued Wednesday in Eidsivating superior court with statements by all concerned and an examination of the man accused of narcotics violations, Hakon Willoch. Along with four members of the crew of the seagoing ship "Baby Bel," he is accused of having smuggled a total of 115 kilograms of hashish from Morocco to Norway in the period from October 1979 to June 1980. The charges against Willoch also included a number of other serious violations. These were examined in more detail during yes- terday's hearing. Willoch has confessed to only one of the items in the accusation without reservations. This involved helping to finance Einar Aarseth's stay when he was on the run in Spain. "Aarseth is a friend of mine and I was glad to help him. I ur.~Qrstood that he needed money to stay in Spain and it seemed like the right thing for me to do." Another item on the list of charges is that Willoch and a friend twisted the arm of 64-year-old Georg Alstad behind his back and forced him into a bath- tub full o� water in September 1978 in Goteborg. According to the charges, the two held the 64-year-old man's head under water until he began to lose consciousness and then left him lying in the bathtub. - Willoch said Wednesday that he had been in Denmark at that time and that the story was not true. "That is a gruesome story. I am not violent; I am a peaceful sort of per- son. When conflicts arise, I use my mouth and not my muscles--there are some people who have already found that out," said Willoch. Both the friend and Georg Alstad have been called as witnesses in th~ case. In a detailed statement to district attorney Stein Husby this February, Hakon Willoch gave a detailed account of what he knew about the smuggling ~ 50 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102109: CIA-RDP82-00850R400504070041-4 trips to Morocco. Willoch said in the statement that he was forced to take that steF to clear himself of information given and accusations made by the smuggler~gang. Willoch said in court Wednesday that he had to do that to show how the others in the case were covering up for each other and putting the blame on him. ~ Before the statement was sent to the district attorney, Willoch had sent letters to the others charged in the case, strongly urging them to make correct statements and tell the truth about his participation in the narco- tics trafficking. _ "The letters were a straightforward recommendation to tell the truth, but the accusations were not withdrawn and I sent the story of the real smugglers to the district attorney. "I was not interested in bringing out the tru.th about them, but in bringing out the truth about myself. They ignored that and I had no choice," said Willoch. In the comprehensive letter to the district attorney, Willoch said that a woman from Drammen knew that her husband was involved in smuggling hashish from Spain to Norway. But in the police hearing a month later, Willoch withdrew that allegation because he felt it was pointless to create prob- ~ lems for the woman. In the written police statement, Willoch characterized the motives for presenting incorrect information as "other than bringing out the truth." Willoch said in court Wednesday that he himself used hashish and he also used the occasion to tell about the ?dniirable effects of hashish. "I am definitely of the opinion that hashish should be legalized. It is a pleasant intoxicant that mak~~ people talkative, tranquil and good-tempered. _ People wtno smuggle and sell hashish have my full sympathy," said Hakon Willoc:h. Willoch said that ever since he was released af ter his sentence in 1977, he had felt persecuted by the police. ~ 6578 CSO: 5300/2301 51 . APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 NORWAY BRIEFS TRONDHEIM NARCOTICS USE UP--Trondheim--Despite the fact that the Trondheim narcotics police cleaned up a gang selling amphetamines on a large scale last year, there are still rumors of widespread use of the substance in Trondhim. According to the rumors, there are several small groups af people smuggling the drug in from Sweden. This appears from the annual report of Trondheim police headquarters which has just been released. The report also says that LSD is again making its way onto the Trondheim narcotics market af ter the drug was apparently rejected by addicts for a while. The police suspect that cocaine is also being used and they think they have ~ good reason for saying that this drug is not unknown in certain artistic and pop circles in Trondheim. In general the report from the Trondheim police narcotics division indicates that nar.cotics abuse is increasing. There was an increase in drug seizures last year compared with previous years and 128 cases in all were investigated compared with 40 cases the year before. These cases led to 31 sentences compared with 15 in 1980. The police feel the use of cannabis has spread both geographically within the district and to a lower age group. [Text] [Oslo AFTENPOSTEN in Nor- wegian 25 May 82 p 14] 6578 CSO: 5300/2301 52 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 � ~ SWEDEN VIEW OF HIGHLY ORGANIZID DRUG NETWORK CHAL?.ENGID Stockholm DAGENS NYHETER in Swedish 28 Apr 82 p 4 [Commentary by Leif G. W. Persson: "The Narcotics Officers' Cops-and-Robber Romanticism Has Taken Over Realitq"] jText] All the talk about dope kings at the top of a pyramid is sheer nonsense, says crime researcher Leif G. W. Persson. The narcotics market is in reality a very flat pyramid, with people moving up ~nd dawn and in and out of the structure. The organization is dissoluble and the individuals are easily dispensab le. ~ The narcotics king is of no more importance to the structure as a whole than the mere user. Evil will b e driven out by evil. This is the thought behind the suggestions ~ of heavily increased authority for the po3.ice. The fight against narcotics is to be paid for by our giving up fundamental principles of law and order. First a comment. There is no given place for the narcotics problem in a debate on law and order. On the contrary, the discussion benefits when such questions are ignored. Here this is, unfortunately, impossible because of the approach chosen by the proponents of the new police methods. It is thus necessary to examine their main argument: /that these methods will bring such great advantages to .the battle against narcotics that they will compensaCe for the losses in law and order/ tbold face]. ~ Now something about the conditions for this battle. - Number of Addicts According to UNO (Narcotics Abuse Commission), there are 10,000 to 14,000 people who are "heavily addicted to narcotics." Z'he number of "occasional _ users --present as well as rehabilitated--can, according to the same source, be estimated at a few hundred thousand. ' S3 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 uther e~perts .mention higher numbers. Nils Be~erot, for example, maintains that we~have more than 20,OOO.heavy usex~s. Be that as it may. In this situation~the esceptions are of less interest. A t~alistic compromise points to the.involvement of 20,000 heavy users and approxiaately ten times as man.y occasional users. Together, these consume (in 1 year, for the whole country, in round figures) tens of,-kilos of opiates (heroin, etc.), hundreds of kilos of stimulants (amphetamines, etc.), and thousands of kilos of cannabis (hash, etc.). Counted in money, it is a market with a turnover of some hundred million kronor a year, or about as much as the cost of society's total effort in fighting the problem--police control, customs surveillance and care of drug addicCs. _ Number of Policemen In 1981 there were barely 400 policemen working with narcotics criminality, evenly distribuCed across the country according to statistical criteria. - Subtracting a quarter of the men, who are on leave of absence, ill, taking classes or on vacation, a force of 300 remains. The majority is behind their desks, busy inv~stigating the 60,000 narcotics crimes reparted in 1981 or questioning the 13,000 suspects who ended up with them during the same year. A mathematical equation: For each narcotics officer there are appraximately 60 heavy users and approx- imately 600 occasional users. For each narcotice officer in the field, there - are 200 heavy users and 2,000 occasional. ones. The Market So much for the conditions of the pro~ect. What structure is demanded of the narcotics market for it to become effective? What kind of technology is needed? Esbjorn Esbjornson has the answer. He is the highest narcotics o�ficer in the country and the man whe initiated and carried through the police strategy used in this field. It is he who has chaired the different teams thaL developed the proposals for the new police methods, and it is he who has tried to sell them in the mass media. He is a man who ought to know what he is talking about. At least if one looks at the purely formal. According to Esb~ornson, the Swedish narcotics ~arket has a hierarchical pyramid structure that is highly organized and closed to the surrounding world. At the top are the drug kinds, surrounded by ~their courts. Below them are different layers of distributors and salesmen. At the bottom are the cus- tomers, the users. ~ 54 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 The dope is pumped through big pipelines that branch out into a network th~t - supports the base of the pyramid. Prom there comes return flow of capital that accumula~es toward the top of the pyramid and f inances new purchases. An economical circulation with a turnover of amounts in the billions, yielding enormous profits. With the help of a group of dependable police reporters who year after year have been gi~en unlimited space in the country's largest media, Esb~ornson and his co-workers have taught us that we can strangle the supply of narcotics by turning of� the faucets at the top of the pyramid. By catching a"narcotics king," "crushing a drug syndicate," we c~n remove those means considered to be the necessary condition for the abuse. This is sheer nonsense. - The King Let us look first at the picture of ti~e dope king. ~ Using the mass media's own terminology, the police have put approximately one dope king a month "out of action" during tt~e 15 years the fight against nar- cotics has been underway. A closex examination of the reality behind the headlines shows that the average dope king has amazingly much in common with the the average basic user. An absolute ma~ority of them are Swedish citizens, with little or no education, - their own addiction and a criminal record. Exchange the word Swedish for Greek, Turkish, Yugoslav...and here you have the average foreign dope king; a person who would make ynu more depressed than frightened and who, in normal cases, would not b e able to manage an ice cream stand without the business folding. Not a millionaire in a s.triped suit with restaurants, b uildings and a Swies bank account. Firm Structure The firm structure of the narcotics market? The inevitable need for capital and connections in order to reach the higher levels? Amounts in the 10,000-kronor range are perfectly sufficient for a person to estab lish himself as a wholesaler. One's own experiences as a user or connec- tions with such people are sufficient for learning the means and the channels that make it possible to move up. There are no watertight doors in the nar- cotics market; people can move readily between the different levels. There are innumerable examples of "stnall narcotics abusers" who have suddenly appeared with personally financed kilo lots. After a short period of esphoria, when the money is gone or the police have stepped in one naturally returns to one's earlier existence. It is possible that "Sivan and Sune"--to quote Esbjornson himself--cannot tell "hash from camel shit." But they learn. In ab out a quarter of an hour. 5.5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500074041-4 Are narcotics difficult to obtain? Amphetamines can be produced in one's own kitchen with normal distilling abilities and ingredients available in a drugstore. Within an hour's travel from Sweden one can get wholesale lots of heroin with the connections and the capital mentioned earlier. Cannabis can be bought by "Sivan and Sune" and ag long as the money lasts. A Hundred Grams Esbjornson speaks ironically about the hecto lots of heroin that are smuggled in in vaginas, recCums, car tires and double-bottomed suitcases. But he carefully avoids mentioning that 100 grams of high quality heroin is equivalent to 3,000 doses, a year's need for 30 exceptionally intensive heroin users, and - that the purchase price for such a lot is around 100,000 kronor,..and the street price is more than 2 million kronor. - And he is very careful not to mention that all available experience, among other things his own confiscation statistics and his own work results, shaa that it is lots of that size and smaller that essentially support the heavy users in this country. The narcotics market is in reality a very flattened "pyramid" where people move up and down in and in and out of the structure, where the organization is _ dissoluble, the availability relatively high and the uncommunicativeness proportionately low, where the individuals are easily dispensable and the narcotics king is of no more importance to the structure as a whole than the pure user and where the addicting drugs seep through the structure in a very finely branched distribution system. The Lever of Belief It is a structure that contains one unavoidable part, if one looks at the abuse itself: namely, the 20,000 heavy narcotics users. Moreover it conta�~ns one essential component, if one looks at the economics of the same market: the 200,000 occasional users who feed the b lackest part of the market with capital. With t?-~is description of the problem, it is simple enough to understand why Esbjornson and his friends-in-purpose insist on presenting ~he narcotics market as they do. They have to, if their resources, their strategies and their technological demands are not to stand out in all their absurd idiocy. Unfortunately, one is at the same time pursuing a policy that is not without consequences. In the first place, it is an obstacle for seriously intended and effective measures against a considerable eocial problem. And it will remain an obstacle as long as enough people believe in Esbjornson's an3 the others' promises and assurances. In the second place, it brings great risks to the policemen who are to be used in the battle: lowered credibility, wasted resources, corrupt legal practice and plain corruption. 56 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102109: CIA-RDP82-00850R400504070041-4 Impossible Task In the third place--and now I have returned to what this debate is actually about--it brings a serious hollowing out of law and order, without giving us anything in return. Esb~ornson's task is impossible, irrespective of new technology and new methods. Please get Esbjornson's article of 17 Maxch and reread it. It mainly contains half a dozen police station stories, an assurance that we must count on the good intenCions of the police and a concluding statement that man is even more awful than Esbjornson believes. Totally apart from the fact that it does not have to be like that because Esbjornson thinks it is, this is not what the question is about. Instead, it is a question of ordinary problem insight and co~anon sense, qualities that in - this case can b e used with advantage to produce a society with a lessened need for drugs and to give us functional care of those who are already users. � We already have enough police knawledge. It is only to return to the o1d- fashioned, strict and legal methods that were practiced before the agent and the cops-and-robber romanticism was allowed to take over raality. 9843 CSO: 5300/2173 57 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000540070041-4 ' SWEDEN MAXIMUM SENTENCES SEEN FOR AMPHETAMINE SMUGGLERS Stockhc,lm SVENSKA DAGBLADET in Swedish 17 May 82 p 6 [Article by Sune Olsson] [Text] Two big drug dealers from the early 1970's are back in custody. ,They will be tried Monday [17 Piay] for deals involving at least 40 kg of amphetamines, and public prosecutor Bo Josephson is asking the court to adjudicate 10 million kronor in compensation for the profits on their businesses. The men risk 14 years' imprisonment. Behind the action against the men lies a complicated and difficult investiga- tion which also includes an extensive alibi check in Spain. The prosecutor and the narcotics police investigator, Criminal Inspector Bengt Widlund, to- , gether with the Spanish criminal investigation police, carried out a big in- vesti~ation, which broke down the alibi offered by one of the men. A Spanish e~amining magistrate, a Spanish hotel-owner, and a Spanish journalist also participated in the investigation. ~arl~ in tt~e 1970's the two men.got long terms for serious narcotics offenses, one of them near the maximum term. That means that they are in the immediate risk zone under the new system of penalties that was introduced when intern- ment as a penalty was abolished a year or so ago. At that time special rules were introduced for persistent offenders, where the importance of Protecting society is regarded as taking precedence over the rehabilitation aspects. In the present case the rules mean that if the men'$ guilt is considered proved the court can sentence them to up to 14 years' in prison. Public pros- ecutor Josephson says that he will demand the maximum penalty in court. The unmasking has its origin in the story of the Netherlands truck driver who was seized in Skane in February when he was about to deliver a truck tire packed with 42 kg of amphetamine. The man, who was later sentenced to 9 years in prison, confessed that on 11 November of last year he had also trans~orted a - spare tire filled with at least an equal amount of narcotics and delivered it in Skane. 58 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500074441-4 Not a Member of the Ring The police's problem, however, was that the truck driver was not really a mem- ber of the ring. He received the tire and contents prepaid from members of the _ league that were unknown to him down on the continent. He found out where he was to deliver the tire in Sweden, but he did not know the Swedish recipients. How the police got on the track of the two men now involved is not reported. They have been in custody for weeks while the investigation was being conducted on a large scale both in Sweden and in Spain. In Sweden the police found in a safe deposit box belonging to one of the men gold, jewels, and loose precious stones worth nearly 200,000 kronor altogether. In 1981 the man had only 32,000 kronor in officially declared income, but he declares a capital of 300,000 kronor in round numbers. ~ The man was released after his previous imprisonment in 1977 and at that time had debts from earlier narcotics deals of several hundred thousand kronor. He paid off these, too. In a bank account that is now empty, a relatively short time ago the man had nearly a quarter of a million [kronor]. And t~hat accoLnt showed plenty of large deposits and withdrawals, the largest in the 100,000 kronor class. ~ Both Deny Guilt In the other man's safe deposit box ttie police found only the equivalent of 50,000 kronor. But they also found a receipt for payments in Portugal made in Swedish kronor. Two items were involved, amounting together to 50,000 kronor. The man admits that much, and several deposits cannot be proved although there ~ are suspicions. But that is also the only admission. Both deny that they tiave dealt in narcotics. The man with the declared capital accompanied his denial with an alibi. He says that at the time of the narcotics shiPment in November, which the prose- cutor blames primarily on him, he was not in Skane but in Spain, where he was held because of a traffic accident. It was a collision that occurred on 8 No- vember, and because the Swede did not have a green card the automobile was held. Afterwards the man tells how he took care of the affair in Spain with the help of a woman, a receptionist at a hotel, as interpreter. He reports an interro- ~ation by the Guardia Civil [Civil Guard], a meeting with the other party, and a settlement on 17 November in Barcelona. But also an appearance before the examinin~ magistrate in Santa Colomne, who decided on 19 November that the automobile should be released. Thus the man could not have received any ship- ~nent of drugs in Skane. Prosecutor Josephson and Criminal Inspector ~�Jidlund, who speak fluent Spanish, established to~ether with the Spanish criminal investigation police: iJever Saw the Man The examining magistrate, who was shown a photo of the Swede, declares that he has never never seen the Swede before. From the court proceedings it appears that the traffic accident did take place, that the Swede was summoned to a 59 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 hearing on 16 November, but that he did not appear at the hearing. He showed up in January 1982. But then the other party came forward and declared that he had been paid by the Swede and~had no further claim. . The other�party, a Spanish journalist, was also contacted during the investi- gation. He confirmed the collision on 8 November and stated that he had been offered on the spot and had accepted 150,000 pesetas in compensation. The Swede had been very insistent on an immediate settlement. Since that time . the journalist had not seen the Swede. Afterwards the Swedish investigators and the Spanish criminalists visited the hotel. It was learned that the director and his wife had owned the hotel for 5 years. On the other hand the female receptionist that the Swede had spoken of did not exist. The hotel director backed that up with his payrolls, etc. The whole Spanish iavestigation is now available in the form of copies of the proceedings, attested by Spanish authorities. 3Fi15 - CSO: 5300/2300 I i 60 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500074041-4 TURKEY - ' BRIEFS NARCOTICS SEIZEI3--Seventy kilograms of base morphine and 258 kilograms of hashish from foreign countries have been seized in Van since the beginning of the year. Van Gojrernor Behcet Bren has said that nine persens were arrested in connection with the seized narcotics. [Text] [TA021640 Ankara Domestic Service in Turkish 2100 GMT 1 J~ 82] BASE MORPHINE SEIZED--Diyarbakir (HHA)--Follo~ing the "lightning triangle" operation carried out in the Diyarbakir, Hakkari and Van Provinces, 59 kilos of base morphine, worth 300 million liras in foreign markets, has been seized and 14 persons have been detained. It has been learnt that these 14 persons belong to an international network engaged in narcotics smuggling to Europe and the United States through the Greek Cypriot sector of Cyprus. A high-ranking official has stated that the names of the members of this network will be disclosed in the next few days. [NC081621 Istanbul HURRIYET in Turkish 4 Jun 82 p 3 1~C] CSO: 5300/5413 61 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 UNITED KINGDOM LENIENT SENTEN~E FOR HEAD OF DRUG-SMUGGLING RING London THE DAILY TELEGRAPH in English 15 May 82 p 3 [Article b;~ lan Henry~ - [Text ] 1~H.i~I.ET BEI{IR, 43, head The judge told them all that of a hu;e dru~- the greedy people incolved in smuggling ring, smiled at drug smuggling played for high the Old Bailey yesterday stakes and had to receive as the judge told kum that deterrent penalties. because of his ill health, Overseas fortune his 12-S~ear jail sentence ~vould run concurrently In fact, 8ekir, who lived in ~rith a 14year sentence a council flat at Portland Rise, ' imposed in January, also Finsbury Park, �is believed to have amassed a personal for- for drug smuggling. .tune in Canadian and American .Tudqe U?iDERHILG, Q C. said banks as well as having invested .he was showing " some degree ia the property market. of leniency " in orderin; a con- ~ His gang handled upwards of current sentence because of �38 ~3niliion worth oP heroin - serious injuries Bekir received ~efore customs of6cers broke his in a r.ar crash in Turkey E~hile ogeration. A Reet of cars, in, on one of his srnuggling runs. c}uding Rolls�Royces, Jag~uars Bekir, who used his North and'Roi~ers; bYought in an esCi~~ London pickle factorp as a mated �30 tai}lion worth of front for his drugs dealings, heroin within a ~�ear. At least was one oF seven gang mem� 1~1 trips were made before the bers jailed for their part in gaag was smashed. smuqgling heroin into Britain His sentence in January was in cars though Dover. for consp~racy to smuggle Three men were each jailed heroin throu~gh Heathrow. for nine vears, two for six years . and one for four years. ~ Jailed for nine years were Sedit Sonmez, 22,,clothing shop owner, of Riga House, Shandy Street, Stepney; Bekir~s brother, Fuat Bekir, 26, clerk of Antill Road, South Tottenham; and Rifat Halluma, 27, sausage maker, of Otway Court, Granville Road, Finsbury Park. Jailed for six year.s were Ibrahim Must"fa, 36, lorry driver, of Horle Walk, - Lilford Road, Camberwell; and Sedat Ka~;~tepe, 22, cafe worker, of Thoresby House, Clissold Road, Stoke Newin~~on. Hilme *~fustakalli, 25, factory worker, of Gabriel Street, Forest Hill, was jailed for four years. CSO: 5320/30 62 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R040500070041-4 ~ UNITED KINGDOM BRIEFS ~ AIRPORT SPOT FINES PLANNEI~-On-the-spot fines for travellers caught with small amounts of cannabis at sea and airports are being planned by the Customs and the Home Office in an experimental scheme. ~reliminary tests are expected to begin at Heathrow by early next year, and will be adopted at other ports if successful. The scheme will avoid costly court appearances for travellers and busy customs inve~tigators and police. It is believed that a 25 pounds' fine for possession of up to 10 grams of cannabis has been discussed but final figures have yet to be agreed. The scheme will involve travellers both arriving and departing from Heathrnw and include internal and overseas travel. If po~3ession is denied then _ existing laws will come into operation and trave~.ers will make a court - appearance. Lawyers believe that it will only need a change in Customs _ regulations to bring the scheme into being. [By John Weeks] [Text] [London THE DAILY TELEGRAPH in English 28 May 82 p 11] CSO: 5320/30 g~ i _ ~ i ; 63 i APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000500070041-4