Myanmar burns $600 million in seized drugs

Thick clouds of black smoke billowed into the sky on the outskirts of Myanmar’s largest city Friday as authorities burned more than 50 tons of heroin, opium, ketamine, methamphetamine, marijuana and crystal meth - some USD 600 million of confiscated illegal drugs destroyed nationwide.
Myanmar, also known as Burma, has a long history of drug production linked to political and economic insecurity caused by decades of armed conflict. It has been a major source of illegal drugs destined for East and Southeast Asia, despite repeated efforts to crack down, and has long been one of the world’s largest producers of heroin and methamphetamine. Violent political unrest in Myanmar following the military takeover in 2021 - which has led into a civil war between the military government and its pro-democracy opponents, as well as ethnic armed groups - has caused an increase in drug production, according to experts.
In January, the military government claimed the country’s largest-ever seizures of illicit drugs and drug-manufacturing equipment, taken from a total of 12 drug production sites during a series of raids in the northern part of Shan state. This year, the street value of drugs destroyed was more than double last year’s total, Police Lt Col Aung Myat Soe, of Yangon’s Anti-Narcotics Police Force, told reporters at a bus station compound on the edge of the city where drugs were being burned. In Yangon alone, some USD 321 million worth of 31 different types of drugs were set ablaze, Aung Myat Soe said.
Events were also held in Mandalay, and in Taunggyi, the capital of eastern Myanmar’s Shan state - areas closer to where the drugs are produced - to mark the United Nations’ International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking. Many areas of Myanmar are controlled by long-established militias organized by the country’s various ethnic groups, many of which are involved in fighting against the military-run government in a bloody civil war, alongside pro-democracy groups that sprang up after the military seized control of the country from democratically-elected Aung San Suu Kyi in 2021.















