Police nationwide crack down on drugs
Police across
the country have vowed to step up the fight against drugs, following a recent
series of drug seizures and arrests.
In Guangdong Province, police yesterday announced the smashing of a big
cross-border drug manufacturing and trafficking gang in Shenzhen early last
week.
A total of four Hong Kong residents were detained for further investigation
after a secret drug production base was discovered in Shenzhen's Luohu District
on June 11.
More than 36 kilograms of methamphetamine, or Ice, plus raw materials and
production equipment were seized.
Yang Jianghua, director of Drug Crime Investigation Department under
Guangdong Provincial Bureau of Public Security, said the crackdown has
demonstrated the police's determination to fight drug crimes and bring illegal
drug manufacturing and trafficking under control in the province.
Yang promised to further expand co-operation with Hong Kong and Macao
counterparts, other international anti-drug organizations and customs
departments in fighting drug related crimes in the coming months.
Guangdong police have uncovered more than 2,200 drug-related cases in the
first five months this year.
More than 2,900 suspects, including a large number of foreigners and Hong
Kong and Macao residents, have been detained or arrested, up 16.8 per cent
year-on-year. Another 24,000 drug addicts were sent to drug rehabilitation
centres, a 17 per cent increase year-on-year.
In Nanjing, capital of East China's Jiangsu Province, anti-drug officials
have expressed concerns about drug use among white-collar workers and young
people.
In the city's Nanjing-1912 entertainment area, drug dealing or use was
discovered in 12 of the 22 bars and clubs during a recent check-up.
According to Teng Jianmin, a member of the city's anti-drug team,
white-collar workers under 35-years-old and teenagers from well-off families are
the main drug users in the bars.
"Most of them are not fully aware of the harm that the drugs might do to
them. They said they took soft drugs just for fun and relaxation," said Teng.
"But they usually lose self-discipline after taking drugs, which might harm both
themselves and society."
During the past six months, the team has arrested 300 drug abusers and
dealers, confiscated 5,000 ecstasy pills, and 3.2 kilograms of soft drugs like
Ice from public entertainment venues across the city.
In Beijing, police said they are taking firm measures against the problem of
drug use in entertainment venues.
Bars, KTV and disco venues are attractive destinations for a growing number
of new types of drugs, Fu Zhenghua, deputy director of Beijing Municipal Public
Security Bureau, told an anti-drug working conference yesterday.
He revealed that while trafficking and use of conventional drugs like heroin
has been controlled, the abuse of ice and ecstasy pills in some entertainment
venues is rampant.
"The new types of drugs are becoming our chief concern in our unremitting
fight against drugs," Fu said.
Statistics show about 40 kilograms of Ice and ecstasy pills were confiscated
last year in Beijing, more than half of the total amount of seized
drugs.
(China Daily 06/23/2006 page1)