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Designer Drug Use Out Of Control, Group Says

VERONIKA OLEKSYN   03/ 2/11 06:08 AM ET   AP

Designer Drugs

VIENNA — Dangerous drugs that may seem safe at first because they're made to dodge bans are being produced more quickly and in greater numbers, often with instructions readily available online, a watchdog warned Wednesday.

Governments should step up their efforts to crack down on so-called designer drugs by closely monitoring abuse trends and making new substances illegal as soon as possible, the International Narcotics Control Board said in its annual report.

"Given the health risks posed by the abuse of designer drugs, we urge governments to adopt national control measures to prevent the manufacture, trafficking in and abuse of these substances," said Hamid Ghodse, the board's president.

While 16 such new drugs are currently being monitored in Europe, Japan recently placed 51 under national control, the report said, adding that a growing number of countries and regions have detected such stimulants.

According to the report, designer drugs are often made by tweaking the molecular structure of illegal substances to create a new product with a comparable effect. They include the party drug mephedrone, sometimes also known as "meow meow," whose effects are reported to be similar to cocaine, amphetamine and ecstasy.

"They can be easily manufactured, as instructions on their manufacture and a description of their pharmacological effects are often found on the Internet," the report said, adding governments should consider making groups of substances illegal at a time to slow the process of finding replacements for them.

The report also included these findings:

- The United States continues to be a prime destination for shipments of illegal drugs and recorded an increase in the abuse of all drugs except cocaine in 2009. It also continues to see an increase in the illegal distribution of prescription drugs, with abuse on the rise among young people. According to government data, so-called pain clinics in some states dispense or prescribe large amounts of prescription opioids to people with no need for them. Canada, meanwhile, remains one of the world's main sources for illegally made synthetic drugs, especially ecstasy and methamphetamine and is also a "significant supplier" of high-potency cannabis.

- The large profits generated by the illegal drug trade make it possible for criminal groups to engage in large-scale corruption that includes paying off police to let them operate more freely. This can impact the credibility and efficiency of a country's criminal justice system and weaken the rule of law. In turn, it also can undermine international cooperation to crack down on drugs. In Mexico, for example, corruption continues to obstruct efforts to fight drug trafficking.

- In Europe, the abuse of cocaine is spreading from the western part of the continent to other areas and in some countries such as Denmark, Spain and Britain, cocaine may be replacing amphetamine and ecstasy. Europe is also the world's largest market for opiates, with the Russian Federation having the highest number of abusers.

- Central America and the Caribbean continue to be a transit area for large-scale smuggling of illegal drugs and the situation is worsened by endemic corruption, poverty and high unemployment. There is concern that earthquake-hit Haiti, already regarded as a major transit area for drug shipments to North America before the January 2010 disaster, is becoming more of a hotspot for such activity.

- In some South American countries, financial support for efforts to address drug-related problems are insufficient. The governments of Bolivia and Peru should take measures to reduce the area under coca bush cultivation and to fight the production and trafficking of cocaine. The abuse of cocaine appears to be increasing in Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Uruguay. Although Colombia is still the main source of cocaine detected in Europe, Peru is becoming increasingly important.

- In Africa, there has been an increase in the abuse of almost all types of drugs over the past few years, with cannabis topping the list. Large-scale smuggling of cocaine from South America through West Africa appears to have picked up again last year after the number of seizures reported in the region fell in 2008 and 2009 after peaking in 2007. The cocaine is largely destined for Europe and North America.

- In East and Southeast Asia, an issue of "paramount concern" is the increase in trafficking, production and abuse of synthetic drugs. South Asia, meanwhile, has become one of the prime areas for drug traffickers to obtain ephedrine and pseudoephedrine for the production of methamphetamine.

- In Afghanistan, the number of opium-free provinces remained the same in 2010 but a rise in opium prices may push farmers to grow more poppy this year.

____

Online:

International Narcotics Control Board: http://www.incb.org/

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VIENNA — Dangerous drugs that may seem safe at first because they're made to dodge bans are being produced more quickly and in greater numbers, often with instructions readily available online, a wa...
VIENNA — Dangerous drugs that may seem safe at first because they're made to dodge bans are being produced more quickly and in greater numbers, often with instructions readily available online, a wa...
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12:41 AM on 03/05/2011
It seems to me - more time should be devoted to getting rid of designer drugs, and less on medicines for people who are chronically ill! We NEED the meds; when things get really bad, it increases to opiates. When druggies want to, they increase to whatever drug for pleasure - ban their use!
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09:17 PM on 03/04/2011
people are miserable these days. there is a general lack of compassion and sincerity amongst most communities. and it drives people to this. the whole point of taking these drugs is to feel a sense of belonging and pleasure that people can't seem to find in the way we used to like sitting by the fire or quilting bees.
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07:43 PM on 03/03/2011
Who here is so righteous that they can judge what I should do to my body? What great wisdom do you possess, that you would put me in a cage for consuming a substance? Is the problem with drugs, or with the righteousness of those who believe you can prevent an impulse by crushing it? The kind of righteousness that rails against a plant that is part of creation, but never the drugs proffered by Industry. The kind of righteousness that uses violence even as it condemns it.


www.offthegridmpls.blogspot.com
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Euterpe360
I'm just a little bi-partisan
09:04 AM on 03/03/2011
I have 3 words for all the individuals on this site arguing for decriminalization of drugs.

HEROIN. METH. PCP.

I'd rather see abusers and distributors of these locked up rather than let them destroy their own lives and potentially the lives of others as well.
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Yam716
For Natural Hair CurlTalk, Visit: lillian-mae
01:42 PM on 03/03/2011
I agree. No way should ALL drugs be decriminalized.
02:53 PM on 03/08/2011
Drugs were freely avaiable at the turn of the century and the whole country wasn't addicted or involved in crime to support their habits. India and Mexico have drugs readily available OTC and the whole population isn't addicted. Pretty soon half the U.S. will have felony charges against them.
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Jeanette DeBella Bogue
pretty sure I'm going straight to hell....
12:26 PM on 03/04/2011
Portugal did just that in 2000. Check out the success they have had.

http://www.foxnews.com/world/2010/12/26/portugals-drug-policy-pays-eyes-lessons/

Here's what happened between 2000 and 2008:

— There were small increases in illicit drug use among adults, but decreases for adolescents and problem users such as drug addicts and prisoners.

— Drug-related court cases dropped 66 percent.

— Drug-related HIV cases dropped 75 percent. In 2002, 49 percent of people with AIDS were addicts; by 2008 that number fell to 28 percent.

— The number of regular users held steady at less than 3 percent of the population for marijuana and less than 0.3 percent for heroin and cocaine — figures that show decriminalization brought no surge in drug use.

— The number of people treated for drug addiction rose 20 percent from 2001 to 2008
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Rob Cypher
somebody you might know
07:47 AM on 03/03/2011
This reads more like a New York Post article than what I'm used to seeing here on the Huffington Post. Has something changed recently regarding their core ideologies?
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FTracy3
My micro-bio is as empty as the rest of my life.
08:49 PM on 03/02/2011
I want to score some of that designer Charlie Sheen the actor says he's so high on.
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09:18 PM on 03/04/2011
so you want to be a goddess? lol
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The Bitpyr8
I didn't color within the guidelines...
07:29 PM on 03/02/2011
Who is it in our of, by, and for the people form of government that gets to decide to keep spending billions of dollars on a failed policy? The war on drugs, which is nothing more than a war on our rights, has accomplished nothing in my lifetime. Natural drugs like marijuana have been used for centuries, and have only been illegal since big business thought hemp was a threat to the industrial cotton and chemical fiber industries.

I'm sick of our government lying to us. They prevent honest scientific study of cannabis, because the science might prove they are wrong. They tell lies about marijuana, to garner support and funds for their ever expanding war on drugs. Our last 3 presidents smoked pot, but that's not something we're allowed to discuss.

Our government is lying to us about the security of our nation. 100% of the cocaine consumed in America is imported. If that much blow, hundreds of tons per year, can get in the country undetected, what else can a terrorist ship in to the country?

I'm sick of being lied to. Take marijuana off schedule 1, and let people grow it and smoke it as they wish. I can make my own beer and wine, but I can't cultivate a weed for my personal amusement? Someone has to be lying for this to be the status quo.
07:08 PM on 03/02/2011
All drug use (including prescriptions) is out of control, because no one can control it except the person taking drugs.

I've said before that prisons are considered a secure and controlled environment and authorities can't even keep drugs out of them.

War on Drugs is a sham.
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Rational Voice
A voice of reason in a world gone insane
05:57 PM on 03/02/2011
... And WHY do we keep having to invent new drugs?

Because for all of time, people have wanted to expand their consciousness through drugs -- basically, people want to get "high", and there is NOTHING you can do that will ever stop them.

The very notion of a drug-free society is completely BS. Drugs are everywhere -- there is not a single person in the world who is not on some drug, be it nicotine, caffeine, sugar, chocolate, nutmeg, aspirin, xanex, cannabis, cocaine, religion, or worse.

The prohibition of existing drugs is ineffective, problematic, and destructive. It does not work on any level. Prohibition has led to the erosion of our rights and liberties, and unwarranted discrimination in the work force. It has led to an unprecedented level of government growth, and bestowed on us the dubious honor of being the country that locks of the most people -- by percentage, by capita, and overall -- We're number 1 ... [sarcastic] yay. And we only have about 5% of the world population! A horrid track record that is clearly driven by profits, and not the good of society or the individual.

We must end this madness. It's time for a more rational approach. We must legalize cannabis outright, and decriminalize all other drugs.
06:33 PM on 03/02/2011
Are you insane? If you decriminalized all drugs all the people who go to prison based on being caught for drug use would be left on the streets and commit other crimes like rape and murder. This country is bad enough as is with alcohol and tobacco legally killing people every day...decriminalizing all other drugs would be a disaster, especially since they'd still be supplied by the cartels. What we need is to allow police to search people at every traffic stop and have a much more strict sentencing law regarding all schedule 1 drugs, that includes weed. That way people would think twice before driving under the influence, because lets face it, if you're willing to put everyone else's life at risk so you can go for a "j-ride" you're also willing to rob them at knifepoint to get your fix.

grow up.
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rabb046
10:38 PM on 03/02/2011
Scared much?
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Rational Voice
A voice of reason in a world gone insane
11:09 PM on 03/02/2011
Nonsense, prohibitionist.

You live in the delusional bubble of your insecure and highly paranoid little imagination. You would have us become worse than most communist ruled regimes!! Who, I might add, have also proved that the policy of prohibition doesn't work, because they couldn't get rid of drugs either. It's far worse when you make it a crime.

Do we criminalize the drunk? The tobacco smoker? The xanex user? And why not? Because it doesn't work. It's far more effective to tell the truth, and let people make their own decisions. Tell them the truth, and surprise; they'll usually make the more intelligent decision. Education and harm reduction is the way to go -- not criminalization.

You need to grow up and face reality -- no matter how hard you wish it so, we can not imprison our way to a drug-free society. We're already number 1 in the WORLD at locking people up, and that's mostly for drugs -- not crimes they committed while on drugs, or to get drugs -- but drugs -- the drugs were the crime. It's a crime to use something to help you feel good in this country if there isn't a bar code on it.

We as a society already live with alcohol, and that's the most violence and crime causing drug there is. We can handle the rest.
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Paul Robertson
05:56 PM on 03/02/2011
Clearly there a lot of innovation going into the manufacture of party drugs. Imagine if they were legal. The effort that's currently going into making 'legal' versions of existing drugs could go into finding safer versions.
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chuck prebys
05:53 PM on 03/02/2011
Dangit......when are my bath salts gonna arrive in the mail??
Don't make me go out and search the streets........
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D Moon
05:28 PM on 03/02/2011
Just imagine if the resources they used to go after marijuana was re-directed to drugs that are not only a lot more dangerous but a drug cocktail that can easily cause problems for people due to the mixing nature.
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Paul Robertson
05:57 PM on 03/02/2011
Or we could scrap the war on drugs entirely and put the money into health care and funding more teachers.
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timbeaux
Novelist, anti-professional politicians, liberal l
06:00 PM on 03/02/2011
Hear, hear.
04:42 PM on 03/02/2011
I think a lot of so-called illegal drugs are just great.
The only time I have ever tried heroin was when it had been pressed into a blue X pill.
That was pretty great.
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Turtlenewz
04:42 PM on 03/02/2011
If people want to take pill it is their business unless they harm others
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traceymarie
the President is black, deal with it
08:31 PM on 03/02/2011
what if they get in their car?
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Turtlenewz
08:37 PM on 03/02/2011
I said if they are not hurting others. The as if someone took a drink and got in a car. Both would be illegal
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Fuddgate
Some assembly required
04:22 PM on 03/02/2011
I'll agree not to look around for strange stuff with names like "Bath Salts" if Big Pharma agrees not to sell any more deadly crap like Vioxx that they profit 86 $Billion on before anyone realizes and or cares that the stuff is deadly and only reluctantly takes it off the market without offering a refund for their ill gained loot. Deal? Or I'll just grow some pot under a 400W HPS.