The story appears on

Page A2

June 20, 2017

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Nation

China to ban 4 more designer drugs

CHINA is to ban a designer drug called U-47700 and three others, it said yesterday.

The use of U-47700, which was a legal alternative to fentanyl and potent derivatives such as carfentanil, has been growing among US opioid addicts.

Last year, the US Drug Enforcement Administration listed U-47700 among the most dangerous drugs it regulates, saying it was associated with dozens of fatalities, mostly in New York and North Carolina. Some of the pills taken from Prince’s estate after the musician’s death from an overdose last year contained U-47700.

China and the US have been cooperating as the US opioid epidemic intensifies.

Deng Ming, deputy director of the National Narcotics Control Commission, said that U-47700 and three other synthetic drugs — MT-45, PMMA, and 4,4’-DMAR — would be added to China’s list of controlled substances as of July 1.

Yu Haibin, a division director at the Ministry of Public Security’s Narcotics Control Bureau, said China was making “big efforts” to deal with drugs known as new psychoactive substances. These substances are made by modifying the chemical structures of controlled substances in order to get around the law, and China has now restricted 138 of them.

However, as soon as one substance is banned, chemists create slightly different and technically legal alternatives and then market them online.

“My feeling is that it’s just like a race and I will never catch up with the criminals,” Yu told a news conference. “Actually, we just want to make a breakthrough in dealing with this.”

To counter the cat-and-mouse game, Yu said authorities had set up a system whereby information on new types of drugs gleaned during police investigations, customs clearances and medical treatment would be transferred to the national drug lab. An expert committee would then assess this information and send alert notices to relevant agencies in order to help speed up the control of new substances, he said.

Yu said suspects use the Internet to communicate with customers and use bitcoin to transfer money. Authorities were working with Internet companies to try to stop such trade and the online advertising of drugs.

To combat drugs being sent by post or express delivery service, authorities were carrying out real-name registration requirements and X-rays of parcels being delivered to “high-risk areas,” he said.

Justin Schoeman, Beijing-based country attache for the US Drug Enforcement Administration, told the news conference: “I can tell you that when China controls a substance, (new psychoactive substances) or fentanyl-classed substance, it has a huge impact on seizures and availability in the US, so thank you very much.

“The controlling of substances in China certainly saves lives in the US.”

He said China’s banning of additional substances means the US and China can now carry out joint investigations on those chemicals, including the tracking of packages from source through to recipients in the US.

U-47700 is a synthetic opioid, a fast-proliferating class of drugs that have caused thousands of deaths in the US. In 2015 alone, there were 9,580 deaths due to synthetic opioids other than methadone, accounting for almost a fifth of all overdose deaths.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend