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oldandwise
Enthusiast


Reged: 02/03/04
Posts: 214
Loc: ky
Drug sales on Internet 'booming'
      #230394 - 03/03/05 05:55 AM

http://edition.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/europe/03/02/un.drugs.reut/

Illegal drug sales on the Internet are booming as unlicensed online pharmacies selling drugs like morphine evade a patchy global effort to stop them, the United Nations narcotics watchdog says.

In its 2004 annual report, the International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) said Internet pharmacies sell several billion doses of medicine illicitly each year and deliver them by post, making them an alternative drug-trafficking route.

"They are really taking the place of traditional drug traffickers," INCB President Hamid Ghodse said at a news conference ahead of the report's release.

"It is very much increasing rapidly," Ghodse said, when asked how quickly the problem was growing.

The vast majority of drugs sales by online pharmacies involved internationally controlled narcotics and so-called psychotropic substances, which act on the mind, the INCB said. Of those, around 90 percent were sold without the required prescription.

"Billions of doses of controlled substances -- some of them highly potent drugs such as oxycodone, which is equivalent to morphine, and fentanyl, which is many times stronger than morphine -- are sold by unlicensed Internet pharmacies," he added.

These pharmacies blurred the distinction between licit and illicit drugs by offering prescription medication to all customers alongside over-the-counter products like food supplements, the INCB said.

They also posed a risk to children, the INCB said.

"The illicit trade over the Internet has been identified as one of the major sources for prescription medications abused by children and adolescents in certain countries such as the United States," the INCB said in its report.

Legal suppliers were fueling the illicit trade by providing unlicensed Internet pharmacies with many of the drugs they sell, and national authorities should do more to stop them, it added.

"Since most of these pharmacies deal with brand products obtained from established and recognized suppliers, authorities responsible for the control of these suppliers can effectively prevent shipments to unlicensed Internet pharmacies," it said.

Iraq effect?
While some countries were willing to cooperate in investigating illicit shipments from their territory, others needed to do better, it said.

"A lack of cooperation by some national authorities has been identified as a major impediment to concerted efforts," the report said, adding that Pakistan had not investigated some illegal shipments from its shores.

In North America, the biggest market in the world for illicit drugs, the abuse or misuse of prescription drugs appeared to be on the rise, the INCB said.

Another source of concern was Iraq, where a lack of political stability could prove fertile for drug trafficking.

"The drug situation in Iraq may deteriorate further because of the disintegration of the drug control structure in the country, given its geographical location and the current political and economic instability," the INCB said.

Illicit drug production in Afghanistan had reached a record high and threatened the country's stability, it said. After three successive years of bumper opium poppy harvests there, heroin trafficking in Europe had regained some momentum.

While heroin use was stable or declining in most of western Europe, it continued to increase in eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. Russia had become the biggest heroin market in Europe with over one million heroin users, the INCB said.

The eastern enlargement of the European Union could also weaken measures to fight drug trafficking, it added.

"The board is concerned that the enlargement of the European Union may lead to a weakening of existing import or export controls throughout Europe," the INCB said.

--------------------
They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty or safety" Ben Franklin


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radiometer
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Reged: 12/09/03
Posts: 284
Loc: California
Re: Drug sales on Internet 'booming' [Re: oldandwise]
      #230434 - 03/03/05 08:55 AM

First they claim that internet pharmacies are taking over the global drug dealing trade. Then they talk about how heroin is making a comback. This article makes no sense.

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PopZeus
Newbie


Reged: 02/22/05
Posts: 27
Re: Drug sales on Internet 'booming' [Re: radiometer]
      #230444 - 03/03/05 09:24 AM

what doesn't make sense?

if it is in fact true that prescription drug abuse is way up due to online pharmacies, then the US does in fact have a serious problem. yes, there are legitimate needs out there. no, i don't think OPs are all bad. however, it does seem there needs to be some sort of enforced safety measures so that in the least a 14 year old kid can't get a hold of hydro or OC or whatever the heck else is out there. this is obviously a problem for our country. i still marvel at the fact there are packages that come through our postal service that the border patrol has no clue about. what kind of security is that? i understand the reasons why they can't look at everything - it's all logistics, but still, the basic security alone opens us wide.

just rambling here, but it just seems to me that we have to either 1) acknowledge there is this problem and do something about it or 2) keep on with our conspiracy theories and assume the news is lying to us with someone else's agenda. i have a brother in college and he tells me that prescription drugs are a part of mainstream drug use these days. when i was in college and highschool (6+ years ago) i never heard of anyone abusing prescription drugs, and i was a part of the "in" crowd too. seems like this is a real problem and that maybe those of us with legitimate needs for meds will need to think outside ourselves for once and make some sacrifices to convenience in order to make it harder for these kids to get drugs.

a scarier thought is that it's not the kids buying online at all, but that it's adults who legally obtain and then illegally sell without discretion to age. now THAT"s scary.

--------------------
The medium-sized world is making a comeback
The world at large is drowning


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radiometer
Enthusiast


Reged: 12/09/03
Posts: 284
Loc: California
Re: Drug sales on Internet 'booming' [Re: PopZeus]
      #230449 - 03/03/05 09:38 AM

What doesn't make sense is what the heroin trade has to do with an article about internet pharmacies, or why the heroin trade is increasing when the internet pharms are "taking the place of traditional drug traffickers."

Apples and oranges, plus one contradiction just for flavor.


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monkeyshine
Stranger


Reged: 02/14/05
Posts: 12
Re: Drug sales on Internet 'booming' [Re: PopZeus]
      #230451 - 03/03/05 09:39 AM

Oh yeah like a package coming in from afganistan or iraq isn't going to get scrutinized by homeland security. Would you order from these places?

Most domestic OPs require an adult signature. I don't like the NROPs in general, just my personal opinion I wouldn't trust them because they seem to be criminals the way they hide from the law and use fake pharmacies but even with them it appears that an adult signature is required - but I suppose its possible some slip through the cracks by lazy UPS drivers. What more can be done? There are privacy considerations, legal considerations and constitutional rights issues involved in all this.


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monkeyshine
Stranger


Reged: 02/14/05
Posts: 12
Re: Drug sales on Internet 'booming' [Re: monkeyshine]
      #230457 - 03/03/05 09:57 AM

re: Heroin well what is happening is that because of the problems drug addicts have obtaining heroin, they get prescription meds and process them to remove additives and then inject it in the place of heroin. Not a good idea for people to do this but obviously heroin addicts are have a major medical problem that affects their brains as well.

As for there being a drug problem in America - there were something like 90 million new prescriptions for medicines containing hydrocodone last year. That's "new prescriptions" doesn't include ongoing prescriptions and refills. That, on top of millions of prescriptions for benzodiazpines, and some 30 million Americans smoke marijuana regularly and another 60 to 80 million drink alochol regularly. "problem"? It seems that substance "abuse" which can be real can also be a bit overstated by statistics. Given those statistics a socaial scientist might conclude that mind and mood altering aubstances are either a part of human nature or have developed as a part of the American culture for one reason or another. There is a problem when it causes people to become anti-social, abusive to their family, or neglectful with their work. Otherwise, I can't say there is a "problem" because it really does seem to be the norm!

Here it seems to me that they are pushing two sides against the middle. Doctors are prescribing the meds often, and then the gov't is trying to squeeze an illicit trade out it's a losing battle, just as trying to fight the war on drugs is a losing proposition. You just can win without major fascist style mechanisms in place. I don't trust the government to step into the healthcare field they can't even fix potholes on my street. And though there may be serious issues to resolve, the solution is awareness and treatment not laws, central controls and jails.


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scarrlett
Enthusiast


Reged: 02/02/04
Posts: 232
Re: Drug sales on Internet 'booming' [Re: radiometer]
      #230480 - 03/03/05 11:09 AM

Oh good grief. I had my reply mostly typed & then decided to click the link. The president of the INCB is from Iran...see the headline when he was named... "International Narcotics Control Board Elects Professor Hamid Ghodse of Iran as President". This story originates from Vienna, Austria. I suppose they have a little more of a reason to worry about Iraq & Afganistan.

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Desiree99
Stranger


Reged: 11/23/04
Posts: 11
Re: Drug sales on Internet 'booming' [Re: scarrlett]
      #230594 - 03/03/05 04:23 PM

God, I hate these articles! Guess who pays for the police fervor? Us! If you let doctors here in the states medicate and stop arresting them for it, you won't have a problem like this. Leave the people alone! I hope those countries keep not cooperating!

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