World

Thai meth problem cranking up dangerously

Local drug barons look closer to home as pandemic curbs exports

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 17 Feb 2021 6:30PM

Thai meth problem cranking up dangerously
Methamphetamine supply is bunched up and not getting to the high value markets like Australia or Japan because logistics are screwed up, says UN Office on Drugs and Crime regional representative Jeremy Douglas. – Wikipedia pic, February 17, 2021

BANGKOK – Cheaper than a coffee but powerful enough to keep him riding Bangkok’s streets without sleep, Soonthorn puts a flame to a methamphetamine tablet wrapped in foil and inhales the intoxicating vapours.

Thailand has long been a global gateway for exports of the drug, but the coronavirus pandemic’s sudden disruption of international transport has seen a surge in cut-price “yaba” tablets in the local market.

The drug keeps Soonthorn alert while he ferries passengers around the capital’s traffic-snarled boulevards on his motorbike.

On the days he works without it he feels like his “brain is missing something”, and at the height of his addiction he stole from his parents and former wives.

“I’d steal at every chance – watches, necklaces, rings... the drug was the first priority for me,” he says.

Meth prices have slumped around Soonthorn’s home in the Khlong Toei slum, where pills are sold for as little as 50 baht (RM6.74) apiece.

The father-of-four has taken yaba for years, but traffickers are also chasing new addicts. “Supply is bunched up... it’s not getting to the high value markets like Australia or Japan because logistics are screwed up,” said Jeremy Douglas, the regional representative of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

That was forcing traffickers in Thailand to look locally, he told AFP. “There’s lots of users and potential users. You don’t just sell to meet existing demand. You create demand,” Douglas added.

The Golden Triangle, a small pocket of territory traversing the Myanmar, Laos and Thailand frontiers, has for decades been the hub of Southeast Asia’s lucrative drug trade.

Synthetic drug production has boomed in parts of Myanmar, where it is the number one revenue source for insurgent groups and militias based on the border. Organised crime gangs also take a large cut.

The business made at least US$71 billion (RM286.75 billion) in profit in 2019, with methamphetamines accounting for more than 80% of the windfall, according to UN estimates.

The networks are also nimble. As coronavirus cases surged in Myanmar last year, Thai soldiers ramped up border patrols.

Traffickers responded by rerouting their drug shipments through Laos, Douglas said.

Drug hauls feature almost daily in headlines across the region – in a series of major stings this year, Thai police arrested 19 people and netted more than 14 million pills.

The pandemic has thrust Thailand’s tourism-dependent economy into its worst downturn since the 1997 Asian financial crisis and there are fears that unemployment will see a surge in drug dependency.

“When they have too much time on their hands and because it’s easy to get drugs right now, users can’t control themselves,” said Shaowpicha Techo, a rehabilitation psychologist at a health clinic in Khlong Toei.

But he also says that people in the workforce – particularly those in strenuous manual labour jobs – also get hooked on yaba by using the drug to boost their ability to work long hours and make more cash.

“Over time it actually becomes the other way round because they can’t find enough money to buy drugs,” Shaowpicha said.

Former addict Jum, 32, said taking pills gave her the strength to carry heavy sacks of rice all day.

“It made me feel like a man when I was a dock worker. Even the men were amazed by my strength,” she told AFP.

Rehabilitation can take years as former addicts try to rebuild their lives. Jum is now working to bring her four children out of an orphanage.

“I’m trying to get my life back together, get a proper job, find a permanent address and get my kids back,” she said.

“Whenever I see my kids on weekends. They always ask me ‘when can I come home and live with you’. I tell them that ‘mummy is trying very hard, but... you have to be patient’.” – AFP, February 17, 2021

Related News

Malaysia / 22h

New Malaysia-Thailand border crossing: Businesses will not be affected, says tourism authority

Malaysia / 1d

Gerak Khas drama actress, Tisha Samsir denies drug involvement

World / 1w

Eight monks killed, 13 injured after being hit by pickup truck driven by child (video)

Malaysia / 1w

Malaysians hurt in Thailand bomb blast (video)

Malaysia / 2w

SUV driver positive for drugs, enters opposite lane, crashes into four vehicles (video)

Malaysia / 3w

Prawn dispute a rising threat to Thai-Malaysia relations

Spotlight

Malaysia

Anwar congratulates BN on Johor victory, assures federal government support

Malaysia

Johor PRN: BN officially forms state government, wins 29 seats

Malaysia

Malaysia-Thailand open historic border crossing to deepen trade, regional integration

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Gerak Khas drama actress, Tisha Samsir denies drug involvement

Malaysia

Student stabbing: Teenage girl sent to Hospital Bahagia for psychiatric evaluation

Malaysia

Anwar wishes Tun M a happy 101st birthday

World

Israel shares intelligence with US over alleged Iranian plot to assassinate Trump

You may be interested

World

France under highest heat alert as Paris landmarks close and Tour De France route cut

World

Minor earthquake shakes northern Thailand, no damage reported

World

AI set to reshape nearly 80 million jobs across Southeast Asia without mass layoffs

World

315 earthquake victims remain unidentified as Venezuela death toll exceeds 4,300

World

Typhoon Bavi disrupts S’pore flights as Japan, Taiwan and China brace for severe weather

World

Trump: US and Iran to continue talks as Hormuz tensions overshadow fragile diplomacy

World

Sri Lanka moves to ease prison overcrowding after deadly Negombo riot kills 28

World

Fifteen Indian tourists killed after boat capsizes off Vietnam’s Phu Quoc Island