UN report: The deadly spread of artificial drugs may have severe consequences for humanity

This came in the annual report of the authority for the year 2024, which was issued today, which concluded that the spread of artificial drugs reshapes the illegal drug markets and that the criminal authorities are quick to exploit organizational gaps and generate new artificial substances that constitute great harm to people.
The head of the commission, Dr. Jalal Tawfiq, said that “Non -medical artificial drug abuse and related drug abuse disorders have become a deadly problem that leads to hundreds of thousands of deaths and the damage to the superiority of the description of people and society.”.
He added that there “Urgent need” To intensify efforts in the areas of prevention, treatment, rehabilitation, reduce damage, recovery and social integration in order to protect people from these substances of severe damage.
Moving target
The report warned that artificial drugs can be much stronger than plant drugs, and that they cause hundreds of thousands of excessive doses deaths every year.
He explained that these drugs are manufactured and trafficking easily with a little required technical or scientific knowledge, and there is less need for employment or land to cultivate unlike plant drugs. Manufacturing can be made anywhere and use the same equipment for different artificial products. Travels can change manufacturing, transportation and marketing methods to keep the operating costs low while raising profit margins as well as to reduce the risk of ban.
The head of the International Drug Control Authority said it “With the use of emerging substances quickly to manufacture artificial drugs illegally, they are constantly moving, and criminal parties remain ahead of organizational mechanisms and often act faster than the law implementation agencies can keep pace with.”.
The report also referred to the increasing additional risks of artificial drugs on safety and public health threats due to serious manufactures and trafficking, as well as dumping chemical waste that may lead to environmental damage.
Initiatives to address artificial drugs
The report pointed out that a series of initiatives developed by the authority helps member states to respond to the increasing trafficking in artificial drugs and increase the manufacture of baskets and primary sects used in illegal manufacturing and trafficking in artificial drugs.
The various communication platforms and tools of the authority allow the exported and imported governments to determine the legitimacy or illegitimacy of suspicious shipments that transmit the materials subject to monitoring from the sects, the initial and pivotal sects and the equipment of the manufacture.
It also allows member states to exchange practical intelligence information on trafficking in non -medical artificial influences and chemical sects and the related illegal projects.
Pain relief medications
The report showed that inequality in obtaining opioid analgesics, such as morphine, and their uniform prices, is a continuous problem.
According to the report, inequality in accessing these drugs is a special problem in East and Southeast Asia, Central America, the Caribbean and Africa region where consumption levels are not sufficient to meet the medical needs of the population appropriately. South Asia remains the region with the lowest levels of project consumption for opium analgesics in the world.
To make pain treatment medications available on a wider scale at reasonable prices, especially in low and medium -income countries, the International Drug Control Authority has called on the Ophtdays manufacturers to increase manufacturing.
It was seriously affected in Africa
The report expected that the artificial drug market in Europe would expand due to the imminent deficit in heroin supplies after banning opium poppy cultivation in Afghanistan in 2022 by the fait accompli authorities.
The report indicated that the manufacture, smuggling and consumption of doping from amphettamine materials is accelerating in the Middle East and Africa, where there are limited programs for drug treatment and rehabilitation.
He added that Africa is still seriously affected by drug trafficking with evidence of increased cocaine abuse and associated damage in African countries, and this may be the result of a side effect of the cocaine crossing to Europe.
He also explained that drug trafficking hinders development in Central America and the Caribbean Sea region, while the opioid influence crisis remains a serious challenge to countries in North America.
- For more: Follow Khaleejion 24 Arabic, Khaleejion 24 English, Khaleejion 24 Live, and for social media follow us on Facebook and Twitter