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Information Office of the State Council of the
Peoples Republic of China
Foreword
The present globalization of
the drug issue has posed a grave menace to human well-being
and development. According to data published by the
United Nations in 1998, 21 million people worldwide suffered
from cocaine or heroin addiction, and another 30
million from the abuse of amphetamine-type stimulants.
On her southwestern border China is adjacent
to the "Golden Triangle,"one of the main sources
of drugs in the world. Since the late 1970s, the
illicit international narcotics tide has constantly invaded
China, and criminal drug-related activities touched off by transit drug trafficking have re-emerged. The number
of drug addicts has kept rising, drug-related cases have
constantly increased, the drug scourge is becoming
more serious with each passing day, and the situation is
grim for the anti-drug struggle. In 1999, China
cracked down 65,000 drug-related criminal cases, and
confiscated 5.364 tons of heroin, 1.193 tons of opium, 16.059 tons of crystal methamphetamine (commonly
known as "ice''), and some cocaine, MDMA and marijuana.
In 1999, the number of drug-related cases cracked and
the total amount of drugs confiscated increased by 2.4
percent and 33.6 percent, respectively, over 1998.
The number of drug addicts registered with the public
security organs in 1999 was 148,000, a figure which
rose to 520,000 in 1995, and to 681,000 in 1999. Now drug
addicts account for 0.054 percent of China's total
population. Of the drug addicts, those taking heroin
make up 71.5 percent, and those under the age of 35 amount
to 79.2 percent. By the end of 1999, of a total of
17,316 reported cases of AIDS virus infection, those
infected by intravenous injections of drugs made up
72.4 percent. At present, each province, autonomous region,
and municipality directly under the Central
Government in China suffers from illegal drug-related
activities to a certain extent, and China has been turned
from a victim of the transit drug trade into a victim
of both drug transit and consumption.
Illicit
drugs bring calamity to any country and people. Launching an
anti-drug struggle to eliminate the drug scourge is the
historical responsibility of the Chinese government.
In old China, drugs once brought hideous disaster to the
nation. But after the founding of the People's
Republic of China (PRC) in 1949, the Chinese government led
the Chinese people in a momentous struggle against
drugs. In a short period of three years, China wiped out the
scourge of opium, which had scourged China for a
century, thus performing a miracle acknowledged by
the whole world. Confronting the new drug problem, the
Chinese government, taking an attitude of supreme
responsibility to the state, the nation and the people, and
the mankind as a whole, and standing firm in strictly
prohibiting illegal drugs, has adopted all necessary
measures and done its utmost to ban illicit drugs for
the benefit of the people.
I.Sticking to the
Position of Strict Drug Control
The Chinese
government believes that drugs are a worldwide public hazard
confronting the whole of mankind, and drug control is
an imminent and common responsibility incumbent to
international society. Drugs harm people's health, give rise
to corruption and crimes, disrupt sustainable
development and endanger national security and world peace.
Therefore, all illegal activities involving drugs
must be strictly prohibited and eliminated.
The Chinese people feel keenly the harm of
drugs, and know that drug control is in their fundamental
interests. Safeguarding citizens' lives, and
protecting the people's subsistence and development are the
lofty responsibilities of the Chinese government. For
many years, the Chinese government has taken drug control as
a fundamental objective, and has formulated and
implemented a series of principles, policies and
measures in this regard.
----Attending to drug
control as a vital matter involving the rise and fall of the
Chinese nation. We take drug control as a basic
policy and include it in the program for national
economic and social development, and make it an important
duty of governments at all levels. The governments at
all levels have set up a drug control work responsibility
system that suits the actual conditions of China to
maintain the permanent momentum in drug control.
----Implementing a comprehensive drug control
strategy. We take drug control as a complex social system
project and a long-term strategic task, and use
various means in a comprehensive way-law, administration,
the economy, culture, education, and medical
treatment, to mobilize and organize all social walks of life
to participate in the anti-drug struggle.
----Persisting in drug control according to
law. In accordance with the general plan of exercising the
rule of law, we have persisted in setting up and
perfecting a system of laws and regulations concerning drug
control, administered and controlled narcotics,
psychotropic substances, and precursor chemicals, prevented
and punished drug-related crimes. We have resolutely
cracked down on various illegal activities involving
drugs, started drug addiction treatment and rehabilitation,
corrected, cured and rescued drug addicts, so as to
guarantee that drug control work proceeds in a law-governed
manner.
----Formulating the working principle
of "promoting'4-in-1 prohibitions' simultaneously,
eradicating sources of drugs and obstructing their
channels of trafficking, enforcing the law strictly, and
solving the problem by examining both its root causes and its symptoms."While prohibiting drug abuse,
trafficking, cultivating and manufacturing, we lay equal
stress on the control of illicit supplies and the
prevention of drug abuse, forbid and crack down on all
illegal activities involving drugs.
----Taking
the prevention of drug abuse by teenagers as a basic project
in drug control. As for teenagers, we put stress on
education and protection, adopt various powerful
measures, organize and coordinate relevant government
departments and various mass organizations to perfect
the preventive work, and educate youngsters to treasure
their lives and refuse drugs.
----Actively
participating in and promoting international cooperation in
drug control. The Chinese government supports
international drug control cooperation, and earnestly
implements three propositions in this regard: adhering to
the principle of extensive participation and shared
responsibilities; comprehensively implementing an overall
and balanced international drug control strategy; and
attaching great importance to alternative development to
promote a solution to the drug problem for good.
In China, drug control is led by governments
at all levels, in the care of the drug control departments
of public security authorities, co-administered by
relevant government functional departments and participated
in jointly by mass organizations. In 1990, the
Chinese government set up the National Narcotics Control
Commission (NNCC), composed of 25 departments,
including the Ministry of Public Security, Ministry
of Health and General Administration of Customs. The NNCC
leads the nation's drug control work in a unified
way, and is responsible for international drug control
cooperation, with an operational agency based in the
Ministry of Public Security. In 1998, with the approval of
the State Council, the Ministry of Public Security
set up the Drug Control Bureau, which also serves as
an operational agency of the NNCC. Now, the governments of
all the 31 provinces, autonomous regions and
municipalities and most counties (cities and districts) in
China have set up corresponding drug control leading
organs. Meanwhile, the public security organs of 24
provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities, and
of the 204 regions (cities and prefectures) and 735
counties (cities and districts) under the jurisdiction of
these provinces, autonomous regions and
municipalities have set up police anti-drug squads. The
Chinese People's Armed Police, frontier defense force
of the public security authorities, judicial departments,
Customs, supervision and control organs of
pharmaceuticals, and administration departments for
industry and commerce also undertake corresponding anti-drug
law enforcement tasks. Governments at all levels in
China include the funds required for drug control in their
financial budgets, and along with the development of
the national economy and the needs of the drug control
situation, the funds allocated for such purpose are
expected to increase every year. In 1998, the China
Narcotics Control Foundation was set up, with the approval
of the State Council, aiming at collecting funds from
society at large to support drug control work.
II. Constantly
Strengthening Drug Control Legislation
China
attaches great importance to the building of the legal
system in drug control and persists in drug control
according to law. In view of the drug rampancy over
the past 20-odd years, China has speeded up legislation in
drug control, and has formulated and promulgated a
whole array of laws and regulations, thanks to which, great
progress has been made in legal system building in
this field.
Criminal legislation for drug
control has improved step by step. On July 1, 1979, the
Criminal Law of the PRC was adopted at the Second
Session of the Fifth National People's Congress (NPC), which
specified the crimes of manufacturing, trafficking
and transporting drugs, and the relevant punishments.
In the 1980s, the NPC Standing Committee issued,
successively, the Customs Law of the PRC, the
Regulations of the PRC on Administrative Penalties for
Public Security, the Resolution on Severely Punishing
Criminals Who Have Seriously Sabotaged the Economy, the
Supplementary Regulations on Punishing Smuggling, and
other laws, which formulated further regulations on
punishing drug-related crimes and raised the highest legal
punishment for serious drug-related crimes to the
death penalty. On December 18, 1990, the 17th meeting of the
Standing Committee of the Seventh NPC adopted the
Decision on Drug Control, which included comprehensive
regulations on the types of drug-related crimes and
penalties, the punishments for drug addicts and compulsory
drug addiction rehabilitation, and clearly specified
China's universal jurisdiction over the crimes of smuggling,
trafficking, transporting and manufacturing drugs.
On March 14, 1997, at the Fifth Session of the
Eighth NPC, the Criminal Law of the PRC was revised. On the
basis of absorbing and retaining the main contents of
the Decision on Drug Control, the revised Criminal Law made
important amendments and supplements to the legal
regulations on drug-connected crimes, thus further improving
China's criminal legislation in this regard. The
Supreme People's Court and the Supreme People's
Procuratorate made relevant judicial interpretations
of the revised Criminal Law.
Severely
punishing drug-connected crimes is one of the outstanding
characteristics of China's criminal legislation for drug
control. The revised Criminal Law fully embodies this
principle. First, the law comprehensively specifies the
types of drug-related crimes, guaranteeing that
various drug-related criminal offenses are punished by law.
The law specifies 12 crimes, which cover the
smuggling, trafficking, transporting and manufacturing of
drugs, the illegal holding of drugs, the harboring,
transferring and concealing of drugs and illicit
drug-related money, the smuggling of materials for
manufacturing drugs, the illegal trading in such
materials, the illegal cultivation of mother plants of
narcotic drugs, the illegal trading, transporting,
hand-carrying and holding of seeds and seedlings of
such plants, and the illegal provision of narcotics and
psychotropic substances, as well as the criminal
punishments for these crimes. In addition, the penalties for
the laundering of drug-related money are stipulated.
Second, the law specifies that the criminal
responsibility of a person for smuggling, trafficking,
transporting or manufacturing narcotic drugs,
regardless of their quantity, be legally pursued and
punished. The quantity of drugs shall be calculated
according to the verified amount of the drugs
smuggled, trafficked, transported, manufactured or illegally
held, and not in terms of purity. Third, economic
sanctions are applied against drug-related crimes. The law
specifies that property shall be confiscated or a fine
imposed for drug-related crimes, aiming at depriving
drug criminals of their illegal income and destroying their
economic ability to commit drug-related crimes again.
Fourth, those who make use of or instigate minors to
smuggle, sell, transport or manufacture drugs, sell
drugs to minors, or lure, instigate, deceive or force them
into taking or injecting drugs, and those who have
again committed drug-related crimes after having already
been convicted of the crime of smuggling, selling,
transporting, manufacturing or illegally holding
drugs shall be punished with severity. Fifth, criminals who
smuggle, sell, transport or manufacture large amounts
of drugs shall be sentenced to death. The fact that China
legislatively punishes drug-connected crimes with
severity is required by the reality of the anti-drug
struggle, and shows China's stand for strict drug control.
Strict administration to prevent the abuse of
narcotics and psychotropic substances is a very important
content of the building of China's anti-drug legal
system. Hence China has promulgated more than 30 relevant
laws, statutes and regulations. In September 1984,
the seventh meeting of the Standing Committee of the Sixth
NPC adopted the Law of the PRC on the Management of
Medicines and Chemical Reagents. Article 39 of the Law
specifies: The state adopts special procedures for the
administration of narcotics and psychotropic
substances. In 1987 and 1988, the State Council promulgated
the Procedures for Narcotic Drug Control, and the
Procedures for Psychotropic Substances Control, which
specify clearly the administration of the production,
supply, transportation, use, import and export of narcotics
and psychotropic substances. In 1995, the State
Council promulgated the Procedures for Compulsory
Drug Addiction Rehabilitation, and the Ministry of Health
issued the Procedures for the Administration of
Pharmaceuticals for Drug Addiction Treatment. Hence the work
in this regard has laws to follow.
To
prevent precursor chemicals diverting into illegal channels,
and crack down on relevant illegal or criminal activities,
Chinese legislative bodies and the Chinese government
have also issued a series of laws and regulations for the
strict control of such chemicals. The Criminal Law of
the PRC, the Customs Law of the PRC, and the Decision on
Drug Control made by the NPC Standing Committee
include stern penalties for the criminal offenses of
illegally trading and smuggling precursor chemicals,
ephedrine and other raw materials and ingredients
intended to be processed into drugs.
In
addition, the legislative organs of Yunnan, Guizhou,
Sichuan, Guangdong, Gansu, Shaanxi, Heilongjiang and Jiangsu
provinces, and the Guangxi Zhuang and Ningxia Hui
autonomous regions have worked out local drug control
statutes in accordance with local conditions.
At present, China has formed a preliminary
anti-drug legal system with criminal laws as the mainstay,
and administrative and local statutes as supplements,
thus providing powerful legal weapons for the anti-drug
struggle.
III. Cracking Down on Drug-related
Crimes
China's anti-drug law enforcement
organs enforce the laws strictly and are waging a fierce
battle against all drug-related criminal activities,
administering merciless punishment to those involved in such
activities.
In China, drugs mainly come from
other countries, and the Chinese government has done its
best to ban transit drug trafficking. In the 1980s,
the government organized public security, armed police and
customs organs, and the civilian joint defense teams
to coordinate the fight against drug trafficking,
mainly in the southwest border areas and southeast coastal
areas. It mobilized a large number of people, a great
quantity of materials and a large amount of money. Three
"lines of defense"were set up to keep drugs
from flowing in: The first line was the borderland, where
exit and entry were subject to strict examination; the
second line was composed of checkpoints in inland
regions; and the third line consisted of checks on vital
lines of communication, airports, railway stations
and harbors. In the 1990s, the work of banning transit drug
trafficking was further intensified and attention was
paid to "eradicating sources of drugs and
obstructing their channels of trafficking." Checking
was publicly done on key lines of communication, and
at airports, railway stations, sea ports and harbors, so
that a situation was created in which defense was
organized in a unified way and actions were
coordinated with due divisions of labor and incoming drug
dealers were subject to encirclement, pursuit,
obstruction and interception. The functions of relevant
organs such as the public security, customs,
forestry, posts and telecommunications, railway,
civil aviation and other transport departments have been
brought into full play, culminating in a signal
victory in the battle against drugs. Since 1982, more than
70,000 transit drug trafficking cases have been
cleared up in Yunnan Province alone, and more than 80
tons of heroin and opium from the "Golden
Triangle"area have been confiscated. In May
1994, police in Yunnan Province cracked an extraordinarily
serious transnational drug smuggling case, in which
the "Golden Triangle"drug ring kingpin was
sentenced by the judicial organ to capital punishment
according to law. For many years China's law
enforcement organs have consistently adopted a highhanded
policy in dealing with drug-related criminal
activities and struck heavy blows at the overweening
arrogance of the drug-related culprits both at home and
abroad.
While stemming the trafficking of
drugs from abroad, the Chinese government has continuously
organized special battles against drugs, constantly
focussing attention on areas where drugs constitute a
serious problem and hitting hard at drug crimes at home.
In the three consecutive years from 1983 to 1986,
China launched a nationwide campaign to crack down on
criminal offenses, targeted mainly at drug-related
crimes. In August 1992, the Yunnan provincial government
organized an 83-day armed drug elimination operation,
in which a massive drug- and weapon-smuggling ring which had
been operating in the town of Pingyuan, Wenshan
Prefecture, Yunnan Province, with the characteristics of a
criminal syndicate was smashed at one fell swoop. From
1993 to 1996, in the southwest border areas, the
Ministry of Public Security launched a three-year campaign
against drugs and firearms. In 1997, according to a
unified deployment the NNCC launched a momentous anti-drug
campaign nationwide, with great success. Since 1999,
under the unified organization of the NNCC key areas like
Yunnan, Guizhou, Sichuan, Guangdong and Gansu
provinces and the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region have paid
great attention to drug-infested areas and cracked a
sequence of major drug-related cases, arrested a contingent
of drug-traffickers, wiped out a batch of drug-smuggling
gangs and eradicated a number of underground
drug-dealing markets and networks. From 1991 to 1999,
China's drug-control organs cracked more than 800,000
drug cases, and confiscated 39.67 tons of heroin, 16.894
tons of opium, 15.079 tons of marijuana and 23.375
tons of methamphetamine.
China is a country
with a large population. So it needs a lot of legal narcotic
drugs and psychotropic substances. While endeavoring
to protect people's health and meet the needs of medical
treatment the government practices strict control of 118
narcotic drugs and 119 psychotropic substances, and
their production, trading, use and import and export are
restricted to prevent illegal circulation. The health
and pharmaceuticals control and management departments, as
well as the agricultural, industrial and commercial
administration, foreign trade, customs, public security,
railway, civil aviation and other transport
departments in different areas carry out security
checks every year on the production, trading,
transportation, and import and export of narcotic
drugs and psychotropic substances. The illegal production,
trafficking and supply or abuse of such drugs and
substances are promptly investigated and punished. A
large number of criminal cases of stealing, illegal buying
and selling or addiction of pethidine and other
narcotic drugs have been investigated and severely dealt
with in Heilongjiang, Shanxi and Shaanxi provinces
and the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region in the northern
part of China.
The Chinese government
prohibits the cultivation of mother drug plants. It has
always taken this as a focal point of its drug
control work and paid constant attention to it as a
way to nip troubles in the bud. Every year, the NNCC
instructs governments at all levels to promote the
activities to eradicate drug cultivation and to carry out a
responsibility system along that line. Anti-drug
publicity and education is conducted among the people and
efforts are made to investigate illegal drug planting and to
see that drug growers are punished and the plants are
uprooted wherever they are found. The local governments in
key mountainous and forested areas organize special
teams every year to investigate and check the illegal
planting of mother drug plants. Since 1992, the NNCC
and forestry departments have organized aerial surveillance
of suspected planting in the primeval forests in the
Greater Hinggan Mountains in northeast China and in the
Lianhua Mountains in northwest China, with modern
scientific and technological methods. As a result of all
this, China has virtually eradicated the illegal cultivation
of mother drug plants.
IV. Exercising Strict Control over
the Precursor Chemicals
Since the 1980s,
transnational smuggling and trafficking of precursor
chemicals and of ephedrine have increased rapidly in
tandem with the prevalence of the global drug problem
and the extended production of chemosynthesized drugs. The
Chinese government takes seriously its responsibility
to the international community to strictly control these
chemicals and ephedrine, in earnest compliance with
its duties under international anti-drug conventions.
Laws and regulations on the control of such
chemicals have gradually been perfected. In October 1988,
the relevant government departments issued a document
on the control of exports of acetic oxide, ether and
chloroform, which can be used for synthesis of heroin
and other narcotic drugs. In January 1993, China exercised
control over the export licenses for the 22 precursor
chemicals as listed in the UN Convention Against Illicit
Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances, and
in June 1996 it also exercised control over the
import licenses for these chemicals. In April 1997, China's
relevant foreign trade department issued the Interim
Regulations on the Control of the Import and Export of
Precursor Chemicals, and in December 1999, the
Regulations on the Control of the Import and Export of
Precursor Chemicals was officially issued. At the same time,
local regulations on the overall control of the
production, transportation, trading and use of such
chemicals were formulated in provinces such as Yunnan
and Sichuan that border on the sourcelands of narcotic
drugs. At present, the Chinese government is
formulating nationwide regulations on the control of
such chemicals.
Regulations on the control of
ephedrine have steadily been improved. From 1992 to 1998,
the relevant government departments issued several
regulations on the control of ephedrine. In March 1998, the
State Council issued the Notice on Further
Strengthening the Control of Ephedrine. The notice
stipulates that the production, trading, transportation, use
and export of ephedrine shall be subject to special
control. In December 1998, the relevant departments jointly
issued the Notice on Issues Pertaining to the
Strengthened Control of the Export of Ephedrine-typed
Products, exercising control over the export of the
12 saline products, semi-finished products, derivatives and
single preparations of ephedrine. In June 1999 and May
2000, they issued the Procedures for the Control of
Ephedrine and the Regulations on the Control of
Transportation Licenses for Ephedrine, which have
further improved the rules on the strict control of
ephedrine.
The competent departments and law
enforcement organs at all levels strictly implement the
state's relevant laws and regulations, and
continuously strengthen the supervision and control of the
production and circulation of precursor chemicals and of
ephedrine. The legal production and trading of these
chemicals and ephedrine are protected by law, but the
illegal buying and selling, trafficking and smuggling
of these products shall be severely punished. The border
areas and ports of entry and exit of provinces and
autonomous regions in southwest, northwest and northeast
China have consistently investigated and banned the
import of drugs as well as the smuggling abroad of
those chemicals and ephedrine in pursuance of their
"two-way investigation program."From 1997
to 1999, China cracked 548 cases of illegal buying, selling
and smuggling of precursor chemicals and confiscated
more than 1,000 tons of illegal chemical products.
In collaboration with UN drug control organs
and competent departments of other countries, the relevant
departments of China have set up an international
system to check the import and export of precursor
chemicals. In 1999 alone, China examined 568 such
import and export cases, and 35 cases of illicit trading
were discovered and curbed. As a result, 3,380 tons of
chemical products were withheld from export. From
April to December 1999, China discovered six cases of such
illegal trading, and withheld 1,160 tons of potassium
permanganate from export, during the global drive known as
"Purple Action."China joined with more than
20 countries, regions and international organizations,
during this campaign to thwart illegal trafficking in
potassium permanganate.
Since the
1950s, China has exercised strict control over amphetamines
and other psychotropic substances. In view of the fact
that criminal activities involving the manufacture
and trafficking of methamphetamines have become increasingly
rampant in the past few years, Chinese public
security organs have launched several campaigns specially
against such activities, particularly in the
southeast coastal areas of the country. In 1999, the NNCC
added the prohibition of drug manufacture to its
"simultaneous promotion of three
prohibitions"anti-drug principle (simultaneous
prohibition of addiction, trafficking and cultivation of
drugs), making it the "simultaneous promotion of
four prohibitions"principle. Public security
authorities across the country have thenceforth
intensified their operations against the manufacture and
trafficking of methamphetamines and other drug-related
crimes, and these operations have been crowned with
outstanding success. From 1991 to 1999, China cracked 360
cases involving the production and trafficking of
methamphetamines, dealing a heavy blow to such activities.
V.
Treatment and Rehabilitation
To protect the
physical and mental health of Chinese citizens, maintain
public order, and wipe out once and for all the scourge
of drugs, the Chinese government attaches great
importance to and vigorously carries out the work of drug
prohibition and the rehabilitation of addicts. To
this end, it has adopted comprehensive measures for the
rehabilitation of addicts, and their treatment and
recovery, integrated with compulsory measures and social
help and education, in a concerted effort to eradicate
drug abuse and save drug addicts.
According to Chinese law, drug takers must be
rehabilitated. Therefore, an investigation and registration
system and monitoring networks of drug abuse have
been established throughout the country, regularly
collecting data and materials, and promptly
monitoring the conditions of addicts. The State
Council has promulgated the Procedures for Compulsory Drug
Addiction Rehabilitation, and the related department
has formulated the Guiding Principles for Commonly Used
Therapies Applicable to Opiates Addicts and the
Procedures for the Control of Pharmaceuticals for Drug
Addiction Treatment, to standardize the work of the
rehabilitation and treatment of addicts in China. The state
has also established drug dependence research centers, drug
abuse monitoring centers, drug dependence treatment
centers and narcotic drugs laboratories, and organized
scientific research institutions and experts to
conduct research on scientific methods of rehabilitation for
addicts and pharmaceuticals for drug addiction
treatment. Proceeding from its concrete conditions, China
has adopted various measures to rehabilitate addicts,
taking compulsory measures as the main principle. All
addicts are sent to compulsory rehabilitation centers
established by governments at all levels. Those who
resume drugs after receiving compulsory treatment are sent
to reeducation-through-labor centers administered by
judicial departments, where they are forced to undergo
treatment side by side with reeducation through
physical labor. Addicts who are unsuitable for
receiving treatment in compulsory rehabilitation centers are
ordered to give up within a definite time period
under the guardianship of their family members and the
education and administration of the local public
security stations. Some local medical institutions also
offer services for the rehabilitation and treatment of
volunteer addicts. In some areas, measures adaptable
to local conditions have also been taken to supervise and
help addicts become rehabilitated through mass
organizations and organizations at the grassroots level.
In China, addicts mainly receive treatment at
compulsory rehabilitation centers and treatment and
reeducation-through-labor centers-special schools for
educating and saving addicts from ruin. Specific and
concrete provisions are formulated in the Procedures
for Compulsory Drug Addiction Rehabilitation on the
construction, administration, rehabilitation measures and
welfare provisions of compulsory rehabilitation
centers. Chinese public security and judicial organs have
also formulated regulations on the hierarchical and
standardized administration of compulsory rehabilitation
centers and treatment and reeducation-through-labor
centers. Governments at all levels also earmark large
amounts of funds for the establishment of special
rehabilitation centers each year. At present, China has a
total of 746 compulsory rehabilitation centers and 168
treatment and reeducation-through-labor centers
(teams). In 1999, over 224,000 and 120,000 addicts received
treatment at compulsory rehabilitation centers and
treatment and reeducation-through-labor centers,
respectively. The rehabilitation centers carry out
strict, scientific and civilized administration according to
law, adhering to the principle of saving addicts through
reform education. They offer to addicts safe and
scientific treatment, legal and moral education, and strict
training to correct their behavior, and organize them
to learn scientific and general knowledge, carry out varied
and stimulating recreational and sports activities,
and engage in appropriate productive labor, by which they
can both improve their physical agility and master skills to
earn their livings. All the income from their work is
used to improve their living conditions. To fully respect
and guarantee the legal rights and interests of
addicts, the centers carry out an open security system and
voluntarily lay their work open to the supervision of
the deputies to the NPC and the general public. State
narcotics control organs and health and anti-epidemic
departments jointly carry out the work of survey,
education, prevention and cure in connection with AIDS at
the centers, and conduct investigations into HIV
infection among addicts in some provinces. Endeavoring to
realize standardized administration, a number of
centers in Yunnan, Guizhou, Gansu and Guangdong provinces
have created the experience of "undergoing treatment along hospital lines, offering education
along school lines, managing the environment along garden
lines and achieving rehabilitation along labor
lines," and have been called "places of rebirth
where I bade farewell to drugs" by many addicts.
To solve the difficult problem of the high
rate of relapse, the Chinese government carries out the work
of continuous help and education for rehabilitated
addicts upon their return to society, relying on the masses
and mobilizing all social forces. Local public
security organs, community organizations, units and families
closely cooperate with rehabilitation centers to establish a
social help and education system and various types of
help and education groups, and fully carry out the relevant
measures, organically integrating compulsory
rehabilitation with help, education and consolidation
measures. Mass organizations, including the trade
unions, the Communist Youth League (CYL) organizations, the
women's federations and the associations of
self-employed industrialists and businessmen, help
with the work of rehabilitating addicted women, workers and
staff members, young people and self-employed
laborers by making full use of their own advantages, to
great effect. Governments at all levels and
grassroots organizations actively help the rehabilitated
addicts to solve concrete problems in their life and work,
so that they will not be discriminated against in
employment or admission to higher education. Many addicts
have returned to society and started to lead a new
life upon successful rehabilitation.
Narcotics
prohibition and the rehabilitation of addicts are
breakthrough points in the effort to completely solve the
drug problem. In recent years, the Inner Mongolia and
Guangxi autonomous regions and Yunnan, and Guizhou provinces
have gradually probed a new way of motivating the
drug control work as a whole-starting with the grassroots
units (communities), and stressing drug prohibition
and the rehabilitation of addicts, to establish
"drug-free communities." The basic procedure is as
follows: With small communities in cities
(sub-districts) and the countryside (towns and townships) as
the lowest units, and under the unified leadership of
the organs of state power in the communities, establishing
administrative and working responsibility systems of
drug prohibition covering the whole community, dividing up
the responsibilities and assigning a part to each
unit and individual to realize the "drug-free"
target and establish "drug-free communities,"
continuously enlarging their coverage, and finally
realizing the "drug-free" target in a particular
county, city or province. Baotou City in the Inner Mongolia
Autonomous Region is a model in this regard. The drug
problem used to be very serious in the city. However, there
has been a drive to pronounce communities there
"drug-free" since 1994, stressing drug prohibition
and the rehabilitation of addicts, and establishing
the working system of dividing the responsibilities among
the help and education groups and all the local grassroots
units. In this way, a situation has been created
where all people in Baotou are taking part in the anti-drug
struggle. At present, the city has a total of 2,169
help and education groups, implementing the related measures
to over 2,000 addicts, and the consolidation rate of
rehabilitation over one year has reached more than 70
percent. It has also established 1,436 "drug-free communities" (90.2 percent of the total), and
basically realized the "drug-free" target in the
entire area.
Experience has proved that the
drive to make communities drug-free conforms to the
situation in China and the strategic requirements of
mobilizing the entire people to treat the drug problem
comprehensively. "Drug-free community" is an
effective vehicle for protracted combat vs drugs. In
1999, the NNCC publicized nationwide the advanced experience
of Baotou and other cities and made arrangements for
activities to establish "drug-free communities"
across the country.
VI.
Raising the Consciousness of the Entire People Vs Drugs
The key to drug control work is to arouse the
consciousness of the general public. China regards it as a
fundamental and strategic task to raise the
consciousness of the whole nation concerning the fight
against drugs, and carries out extensive and
deep-going drug prevention education among all the
people.
Governments at all levels attach great
importance to publicizing the dangers of drugs, and
formulate plans every year to carry out drug
prevention education to persuade the public to turn their
backs on drugs. Local drug control departments often carry
out education, publicity and consultation activities
concerning the dangers of narcotics and the anti-drug laws,
using the news media-newspapers, radio and television
programs, and by other methods appealing to the general
public, closely cooperating with the departments of
publicity, culture, radio, film and television, and press
and publications. The NNCC Office and its local
branches have also opened special telephone lines
providing advice and information on drug-related issues.
Yunnan and some other provinces and cities have
started periodicals and opened web pages on the Internet in
this regard. Every year on June 3, the commemoration
date of Lin Zexu's burning of opium stocks in Humen beach,
Guangdong Province in 1839, and on June 26, the
International Day Against Illicit Drug Trafficking and
Abuse, local governments organize large-scale activities to
publicize the dangers of narcotics. As drug taking is
a major channel for the spread of AIDS, during the period of
the World AIDS Day on December 1 every year, public
health departments organize publicity activities, with the
theme "refuse drugs, and prevent AIDS.”
From May to July, 1998, the Chinese government
held a two-month national exhibition on drug control. A
total of 1.66 million people from all walks of life,
including Chinese state leaders and young students, visited
it. The exhibition provoked strong repercussions, and
exerted a far-reaching influence. The NNCC also turned the
contents of the exhibition into a Wall Map of the
National Exhibition on Drug Control for distribution
throughout the country. It also organized half-year
itinerant exhibitions throughout China, at which a
total of over 166 million people received education
directly. The success of the national exhibition on
narcotics control brought China's publicity level in this
regard to a new stage, and played an active role in raising
the consciousness of the entire people about the drug
problem, giving a boost to drug control work in an all-round
way.
The Chinese government attaches special
importance to drug prevention education for youngsters.
Special provisions aimed at protecting young people
from drugs are included in the Law of the PRC on the
Protection of Minors issued at the 21st meeting of
the Standing Committee of the Seventh NPC in 1991, and the
Law of the PRC on the Prevention of Juvenile Delinquency issued at the 10th meeting of the Standing Committee
of the Ninth NPC in 1999. In pursuance of the guideline of
paying special attention to education on narcotics
control and prevention among youngsters, governments at all
levels take the education of primary and middle
school students as a basic part of narcotics control work.
In 1997, the State Education Commission (SEC) and the
NNCC issued a notice stipulating that drug control education
as an integral part of education to improve people's cultural quality should become formally part of the
program of ethical education in primary and middle schools,
and that anti-drug education should be carried out in
diverse forms and with definite aims in view in colleges and
universities and primary and middle schools. The NNCC
and SEC have jointly compiled a series of anti-drug
education pamphlets for students. The CYL has also
developed a variety of colorful activities to publicize the
dangers of narcotics among young people, and mobilize them to fight against drugs. Many provinces and
autonomous regions have unfolded the drug prevention
education activities mainly for youngsters. In 1999,
according to the requirements of the NNCC, drug control
departments at the county level and above established
communication centers of drug prevention education in 24,223
primary and middle schools to directly guide the work
in schools.
In recent years, integrated with
the efforts to develop "drug-free communities,"
drug control publicity activities have been gradually
extended to communities to cover every nook and corner of
society. Governments at all levels give every encouragement to sub-district offices, towns and
townships, residents and villagers committees in their drug
control work by strengthening the construction of
organizations of political power at the grassroots level and
self-governing mass organizations, and actively carry
out basic work on narcotics prevention education,
integrating this with the efforts to develop "civilized
communities." In the meantime, trade unions, the
CYL organizations and the women's federations at all levels
carry out anti-drug education among workers and staff
members, anti-drug publicity organized by young volunteers,
and the activity known as "preventing drugs
entering families." Local patriotic religious
organizations actively mobilize religious believers and personages of religious circle to fight against
drugs, carrying on their good tradition of shunning evil and
promoting good. The associations of self-employed
laborers and private enterprise operators at various levels
have conscientiously carried out the recommendations
in the Notice on Extensively Carrying Out Drug Prevention
Education Among Self-employed Laborers and Private
Enterprise Operators in China issued by the China
Self-employed Laborers' Association, and strengthened drug prevention education among the 80 million employees
of private enterprises. In recent years, the NNCC has sent
various anti-drug publicity materials to compulsory
rehabilitation centers, houses of detention, public security
houses of detention, reformatories,
reeducation-through-labor centers, prisons and work-study
schools for juvenile delinquents throughout China to reinforce drug prevention education among the people
who are most likely to fall victims to narcotics.
To make drug prevention education a systematic
and regular practice, the NNCC has made overall arrangements
to carry out the "five-one project" of
anti-drug education nationwide from 1999 to 2001: Every
province, autonomous region and municipality should
establish a drug control education base; every primary and
middle school, college and university should carry
out an anti-drug education activity each year; and every
district should organize a batch of research achievements on anti-drug publicity and theory, produce a number of
literary and artistic works, and train a contingent of young
volunteers in this regard. The state gives full
support to Beijing, Guiyang in Guizhou Province, Dongguan in
Guangdong Province and some other cities in their
efforts to build permanent drug control education bases. In
the meantime, China has published the Yearly Report on Drug Control in China since 1998.
VII. Developing International
Cooperation in Drug Control
It is highly
necessary to strengthen international cooperation in drug
control to promote the battle against narcotics worldwide and radically solve the drug problem in China. On the
basis of clinging to the Five Principles of Peaceful
Coexistence [mutual respect for territorial integrity
and sovereignty, mutual non-aggression, non-interference in
each other's internal affairs, equality and mutual
benefit, and peaceful coexistence], China has all along
actively participated in and promoted international cooperation in drug control and played an important
role in this field.
The Chinese government
takes an active part in international affairs connected with
drug control. In June 1985, approved by the NPC
Standing Committee, China acceded to the UN 1961 Single
Convention on Narcotic Drugs and the 1971 Convention
on Psychotropic Substances that had been revised by the 1972
Protocol. In September 1989, China obtained the approval of the NPC Standing Committee to accede to
the UN Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs
and Psychotropic Substances, becoming one of the
first member countries to it. Beginning in 1984, China has
sent delegations many times to attend international
drug control meetings held by the United Nations, the
International Criminal Police Organization, the World
Customs Organization and the World Health Organization. In
October 1989, China held the Asian Region Anti-Drug
Seminar in Beijing and in November 1996, hosted the
International Stimulant Specialists Meeting in Shanghai. The Chinese government sent delegations to take part in
the 17th and 20th UN special General Assembly sessions on
drug control in February 1990 and June 1998,
declaring the Chinese government's resolute anti-drug stand,
policies and measures to the international community.
China is an active supporter and promoter of
cooperation in drug control in the sub-region, as initiated
by the UN. In May 1991, the NNCC of China hosted the
first meeting of senior officials of China, Thailand,
Myanmar and the United Nations Drug Control Program
(UNDCP) in Beijing, to discuss the proposal on multilateral
cooperation against drug abuse in the sub-region. In
June 1992, China, Myanmar and the UNDCP signed the
China/Myanmar/UNDCP Joint Cooperation Project on Drug
Control in Rangoon, Myanmar. In October 1993, China,
Myanmar, Thailand, Laos and the UNDCP signed the Memorandum of Understanding on Narcotic Drugs
Control, which stressed keeping contacts between high
officials to further the cooperation in drug control
in the sub-region. On May 1995, China, Vietnam, Laos,
Thailand, Myanmar, Cambodia and the UNDCP convened
the first minister-level meeting on cooperation in
sub-region drug control in Beijing. The meeting adopted the Beijing Declaration and signed the
Sub-region Drug Control Program of Action. In 1999, the
Chinese government sent delegations to attend the
sub-region minister-level meetings in Japan and Laos to
continue to promote enthusiastic cooperation in drug
control in the sub-region.
China has
constantly strengthened bilateral and multilateral
cooperation in drug control with other countries. In 1985
China began to cooperate with the United States in
drug control, and in 1987 the governments of the two nations
signed the Sino-US Memorandum of Cooperation in
Narcotic Drugs Control. In 1997, the heads of the two states
signed the Sino-US Joint Statement containing
contents on cooperation in drug control, which upgraded this
cooperation between the two countries to a new level.
Subsequently, the governments of China and the United States
mutually accredited anti-drug liaison officers. Meanwhile, China attached importance to the
cooperation in drug control with Russia, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. In April 1996, China and
Russia signed the Agreement on Cooperation Against Illicit
Trafficking and Abuse of Narcotic Drugs and
Psychotropic Substances. In 1998 the heads of state of
China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia and Tajikistan signed
a joint statement, taking cracking down
drug-connected and transnational crimes as major contents in
cooperation among the five countries. In addition,
the Chinese government has signed bilateral agreements on
cooperation in drug control with the governments of
Mexico, India, Pakistan, Colombia and Tajikistan.
For many years, China has developed
cooperation in many forms with the United States, Canada,
Japan, France, Australia, Thailand, Myanmar, Laos,
Vietnam and Cambodia in anti-drug information exchange,
training and law enforcement. Since 1996, China has
successively established a liaison officer system of
anti-drug law-enforcement cooperation in border areas with Myanmar, Laos, Vietnam and Russia. Besides, the
police authorities of China, the United States, Canada,
Japan and the Republic of Korea have on many
occasions jointly cracked cases of illicit traffic in drugs
through international anti-drug information exchange
and judicial cooperation, effectively deterring
transnational drug-related crimes.
The Chinese
government has done its utmost to enthusiastically help
bordering countries to unfold anti-drug combat. Beginning in 1990, China has actively helped the northern parts
of Myanmar and Laos, where poppies were traditionally
planted, to promote alternative development by means
of providing technological and agricultural support and
developing tourism resources. These efforts, to some
degrees, have promoted the economic and social development
in that region, consequently helping to reduce the
threats brought to China and international community by the
"Golden Triangle" drugs. At the same time, China has received energetic support and help from
the UNDCP in international cooperation.
Over
the past 20 years or so, China has made outstanding
achievements in drug control and gained a shower of praise
from international community. In the meantime, the
Chinese government has soberly realized that the waves of
the rising international drug tide is buffeting China
more severely than ever and such situation could not be
eliminated in the short run. The drug problem is
still rampant in China and therefore the fight against drug
abuse in China is a heavy task, and there is a long way ahead in this regard. At this important moment when a
new millennium is dawning on mankind and the old century is
giving place to the new, international community has
realized more unanimously than ever the urgency and
importance of drug control. It is a common wish of
people of all countries to solve the drug problem as soon as
possible and to build this planet into a healthy,
civilized, happy and beautiful world. During the new
century, the Chinese government will wage an unremitting, thoroughgoing struggle against drugs nationwide and
will not stop its efforts until drugs are eradicated. The
Chinese government will, as always, strengthen
cooperation with other countries and make unremitting
efforts to completely eliminate narcotic drugs and
build a world free from the drug scourge.
Note: The statistical data mentioned here do
not include the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region,
Macao Special Administrative Region and Taiwan
Province.
June 2000, Beijing
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