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MexicoMeth Labs Proliferate in Mexico

A crackdown on U.S. methamphetamine labs has sparked a proliferation of meth production in Mexico, from ranches in Baja California to industrial parks in Guadalajara.

A Guadalajara drug bust in January uncovered a huge lab, with 11 pressure cookers that could make 400 pounds of methamphetamine per day -- far more than the 20 or so pounds a day typically produced by "superlabs" in California.
Following U.S. restrictions on meth-making chemicals, many ex-convicts and fugitives from the U.S. relocated to Mexico, including a former chemistry professor from Idaho who set up his own meth lab south of the border.

The Mexican labs use huge shipments of precursor chemicals shipped in from Asia to make meth for the U.S. market. Both legal and illegal shipments of chemicals and products used to make meth have increased in Mexico in recent years.¤
CanadaCanada:
Vancouver Mayor Touts Substitute Drugs for Addicts


As a battle brews over the future of Vancouver's controversial safe-injection facility for addicts, the city's mayor is advocating for a substitute-drug strategy that he says eventually will make the supervised program unnecessary.

The Vancouver Sun reported June 6 that Mayor Sam Sullivan is trying to convince Canada's Conservative government to back his plan to give legal substitute drugs to opiate, cocaine, and methamphetamine addicts.
"I would never see [the injection site] as a long-term solution," said Sullivan. "We know there's 90 percent Hep C and 30 percent HIV among injection drug users. The reality is needles are not a good way to take drugs."

Sullivan is proposing five trial programs that will see substitute drugs delivered to about 1,000 addicts within the next 18 months. He's hoping that the federal government will allow the safe-injection site to continue operating until the new treatment program is in place; permits for the Insite program are due to expire in December. "It needs to be there as an essential recruitment site for [the substitution trials.] But I do believe it is a temporary measure," he said.

By emphasizing a change in the injection-drug culture in Vancouver rather than calling on people to stop using drugs, Sullivan believes the program has a greater chance of success.¤

 

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July 2007 turn