News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: More Dangerous 'Pulp Fiction' Form Of Heroin In Uk Comeback |
Title: | UK: More Dangerous 'Pulp Fiction' Form Of Heroin In Uk Comeback |
Published On: | 2009-02-01 |
Source: | Daily Mail (UK) |
Fetched On: | 2009-02-03 07:54:19 |
MORE DANGEROUS 'PULP FICTION' FORM OF HEROIN IN UK COMEBACK
A more dangerous form of heroin is making a comeback on our streets,
Britain's equivalent of the FBI warned today.
High-grade white heroin - which was widespread during the1970s but
was replaced by more well-known 'brown' drug - is easy to snort and
inject because it is water-soluble.
Its dangers were made clear in Quentin Tarantino's cult film Pulp
Fiction, in which Uma Thurman's character snorts the powder, thinking
it is cocaine, and then collapses.
Today the Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca) warned of a resurgence
in the drug in the UK, manufactured and shipped in from
Afghanistan.
Deputy director Steve Coates said there had been a few seizures of
small amounts of heroin hydrochloride in the past year but the return
of the drug was noticeable.
He said: 'We're not panicking but we have noticed the re-emergence of
this white heroin which virtually disappeared in the 80s and 90s.'
He said there had been seizures overseas in Afghanistan and Turkey, as
well as a huge haul last year of ?5.5million worth of heroin,
including white heroin, in straws sewn into the weave of Afghan rugs.
Mr Coates, who has been involved in investigating the heroin trade for
more than 20 years, said law enforcement agencies had seen a 'seismic
change' in the supply to the UK.
He said: 'I would estimate over 92 per cent of heroin used in the UK
and probably throughout Europe comes from Afghanistan.
'Back in the 70s heroin in the UK was mainly Chinese and south-east
Asian.
'Heroin hydrochloride was popular. It's water-soluble which means it's
easier to inject.'
He said as Chinese involvement waned in the early 1980s, the gap in
the market was filled by brown heroin from Afghanistan.
'In the early 90s, there was a seismic shift in heroin trafficking to
the UK. Turkish-Kurdish groups really got involved,' he said.
'When the Turkish criminals started to get involved we saw a real
difference - multi-hundred kilo loads, principally from Turkey.
'They were extremely sophisticated consignments in vehicles, in secret
compartments or metal trays.'
Investigations culminated in the largest ever seizure in 1997 when
authorities intercepted a haul of 890lb (404kg) imported in bathrobes
from Turkey - a common route from Afghanistan.
In June 2003, 875lb (397kg) was seized in a joint Customs and Excise
and National Crime Squad operation.
But Mr Coates said that, despite these successes, heroin hydrochloride
posed a new threat.
Overseas seizures in Afghanistan and Turkey suggest large-scale
producers have started to manufacture white heroin and export it to
the UK.
Mr Coates said Soca is working with partners in the UK and Afghanistan
and Turkey to stop the lethal drug reaching the UK.
Soca's aim is to warn police, drugs charities and users of the return
of white heroin and its dangers, he said.
He added: 'We"ve identified this as a potential threat.
'We're not over-egging it. We simply want to let partners know we've
registered this and to keep it on the radar.
'There's been a definitive change in the market and we can see the way
this has moved on. One of our duties is to publicise that.'
Gary Sutton, head of drug services at drugs charity Release, echoed Mr
Coates's view that the return of white heroin should not bring panic,
but awareness.
He said: 'I'm not surprised about its resurgence. All it takes is one
or two half-decent chemists and you can make heroin.
'In Afghanistan they've got God knows how much opium and brown heroin
so just to take it one step further and make heroin hydrochloride
seems simple.'
He said it was far easier to inject white heroin than brown heroin, as
the ritual of 'cooking' it was not necessary and it just needed to be
mixed with water.
He said the Pulp Fiction scenario could be possible, and snorting
white heroin carries a higher risk of overdose than smoking brown heroin.
Mr Sutton said today's users may be less aware than their
predecessors.
'I think there's probably not the same level of knowledge.
'I get the feeling people don't have that same embedded knowledge
about the culture, the history and where the drugs come from.'
A more dangerous form of heroin is making a comeback on our streets,
Britain's equivalent of the FBI warned today.
High-grade white heroin - which was widespread during the1970s but
was replaced by more well-known 'brown' drug - is easy to snort and
inject because it is water-soluble.
Its dangers were made clear in Quentin Tarantino's cult film Pulp
Fiction, in which Uma Thurman's character snorts the powder, thinking
it is cocaine, and then collapses.
Today the Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca) warned of a resurgence
in the drug in the UK, manufactured and shipped in from
Afghanistan.
Deputy director Steve Coates said there had been a few seizures of
small amounts of heroin hydrochloride in the past year but the return
of the drug was noticeable.
He said: 'We're not panicking but we have noticed the re-emergence of
this white heroin which virtually disappeared in the 80s and 90s.'
He said there had been seizures overseas in Afghanistan and Turkey, as
well as a huge haul last year of ?5.5million worth of heroin,
including white heroin, in straws sewn into the weave of Afghan rugs.
Mr Coates, who has been involved in investigating the heroin trade for
more than 20 years, said law enforcement agencies had seen a 'seismic
change' in the supply to the UK.
He said: 'I would estimate over 92 per cent of heroin used in the UK
and probably throughout Europe comes from Afghanistan.
'Back in the 70s heroin in the UK was mainly Chinese and south-east
Asian.
'Heroin hydrochloride was popular. It's water-soluble which means it's
easier to inject.'
He said as Chinese involvement waned in the early 1980s, the gap in
the market was filled by brown heroin from Afghanistan.
'In the early 90s, there was a seismic shift in heroin trafficking to
the UK. Turkish-Kurdish groups really got involved,' he said.
'When the Turkish criminals started to get involved we saw a real
difference - multi-hundred kilo loads, principally from Turkey.
'They were extremely sophisticated consignments in vehicles, in secret
compartments or metal trays.'
Investigations culminated in the largest ever seizure in 1997 when
authorities intercepted a haul of 890lb (404kg) imported in bathrobes
from Turkey - a common route from Afghanistan.
In June 2003, 875lb (397kg) was seized in a joint Customs and Excise
and National Crime Squad operation.
But Mr Coates said that, despite these successes, heroin hydrochloride
posed a new threat.
Overseas seizures in Afghanistan and Turkey suggest large-scale
producers have started to manufacture white heroin and export it to
the UK.
Mr Coates said Soca is working with partners in the UK and Afghanistan
and Turkey to stop the lethal drug reaching the UK.
Soca's aim is to warn police, drugs charities and users of the return
of white heroin and its dangers, he said.
He added: 'We"ve identified this as a potential threat.
'We're not over-egging it. We simply want to let partners know we've
registered this and to keep it on the radar.
'There's been a definitive change in the market and we can see the way
this has moved on. One of our duties is to publicise that.'
Gary Sutton, head of drug services at drugs charity Release, echoed Mr
Coates's view that the return of white heroin should not bring panic,
but awareness.
He said: 'I'm not surprised about its resurgence. All it takes is one
or two half-decent chemists and you can make heroin.
'In Afghanistan they've got God knows how much opium and brown heroin
so just to take it one step further and make heroin hydrochloride
seems simple.'
He said it was far easier to inject white heroin than brown heroin, as
the ritual of 'cooking' it was not necessary and it just needed to be
mixed with water.
He said the Pulp Fiction scenario could be possible, and snorting
white heroin carries a higher risk of overdose than smoking brown heroin.
Mr Sutton said today's users may be less aware than their
predecessors.
'I think there's probably not the same level of knowledge.
'I get the feeling people don't have that same embedded knowledge
about the culture, the history and where the drugs come from.'
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