1998 International Narcotics Control Strategy Report
Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs
United States Department of State
February 26, 1999
AZERBAIJAN
I. Summary
Azerbaijan is located along a drug transit route from Iran and Central Asia
north to Russia and Central and Western Europe. Consumption and cultivation
of narcotics are at low but increasing levels. The main drugs seized were
opium and cannabis. Azerbaijan is devising a national drug control strategy
including a new national narcotics law. Section 907 of the U.S. Freedom
Support Act has precluded the funding of U.S. counternarcotics assistance
in 1998. Azerbaijan is a party to the 1988 UN Drug Convention and recently
ratified the 1961 and 1971 UN Drug Conventions. The United Nations
Narcotics Drug Control Program (UNDCP) is presently carrying out a
program of technical counternarcotics assistance.
II. Status of Country
Azerbaijan's main narcotics problem is the increased transit of drugs
through its territory resulting from the disruption of the "Balkan Route"
due to regional ethnic conflicts in several countries of the former
Yugoslavia. Narcotics from Afghanistan and South Asia enter from Iran or
cross the Caspian Sea from Central Asia and continue on to markets in
Russia and Europe. Azerbaijan has nearly 700 KM frontier with Iran, but its
border control forces are inadequate to patrol it effectively. Iranian and
other traffickers are exploiting this situation. Consumption is growing
with over 11,000 persons registered in hospitals for drug abuse and
the actual level of drug use is estimated many times higher.
Government authorities suspect that unemployed and displaced persons
from the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict have been drawn into drug
trafficking out of economic necessity. The Azerbaijan government
continues to claim that the Armenian occupied areas of Azerbaijan are
used for drug cultivation, and that narcotics are transported
across the approximately 100km of Azerbaijan's border with Iran
that is under Armenian control.
III. Country Actions Against Drugs in 1998
Policy Initiatives. An Azerbaijan government commission supervises the
implementation of a national program to combat drug addiction and
trafficking. Laws that criminalize drug use and trafficking already exist,
however, additional improved legislation has been proposed. Government
authorities have closed all gambling casinos in the country to halt the
perceived threat of organized crime activity. The UNDCP is implementing a
two-year $740,000 counternarcotics assistance plan which includes training
of Ministry of Interior Police, Customs, and Border Guards, and a technical
assistance program focused primarily on laboratory equipment.
Law Enforcement Efforts. There were over 2,000 drug-related arrests in
1998. Police lack basic equipment and have little experience in modern
counternarcotics methods. Border control facilities on the Iranian border
are inadequate to control smuggling.
Corruption. Corruption permeates the public and private sectors. Government
officials including the President and Prime Minister have remarked on the
gravity of the problem, however, there have been no prosecutions of
prominent offenders that would have a broader deterrent effect. Current
legislation is inadequate to address police and judicial corruption.
Agreements and Treaties. Azerbaijan has no narcotics-related agreements or
treaties with the US, and no extradition agreement. Azerbaijan is a party
to the 1988 UN Drug Convention, and in 1998 ratified the 1971 Convention on
Psychotropic Substances and the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs.
Azerbaijan signed a protocol of intent on counternarcotics cooperation with
Iran in 1996.
Cultivation and Production. Cannabis and poppy are cultivated illegally,
mostly in southern Azerbaijan. In 1998, law enforcement authorities
discovered and destroyed 420 tons of cannabis and 75 tons of poppies, which
were under cultivation.
Drug Flow/Transit. Opium and poppy straw originating in Afghanistan and
South Asia transit Azerbaijan from Iran, or from Central Asia across the
Caspian Sea. Traffickers are also transporting drug shipments on commercial
aircraft from Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Iran to Azerbaijan. The shipments
then are transferred to Azeri aircraft and sent to Istanbul, Turkey. From
Turkey, the drugs are loaded onto Transporte Internationale
Routier (TIR) trucks destined for Europe. Another route is to
smuggle drugs through Azerbaijan to Russia, then on to Europe.
Azerbaijan cooperates with Black Sea and Caspian Sea states in tracking
and interdicting narcotics shipments, especially morphine base
and heroin. Caspian Sea cooperation includes efforts to interdict
narcotics transported across the Caspian Sea by ferry. Law enforcement
officials report they have received good cooperation from Russia, but have
encountered considerable reluctance from Iran to assist in counternarcotics
efforts. The Azerbaijan government provides no figures of amounts seized on
these routes, or about foreign-origin as a percentage of all drugs seized.
Demand Reduction. Opium and cannabis products are the most commonly used
drugs. With UNDCP assistance, the Azerbaijan government has began education
initiatives directed at curbing drug consumption.
IV. U.S. Policy Initiatives and Programs
Bilateral Cooperation. U.S. law enforcement exchange of information with
Azerbaijan increased in 1998, however, no counternarcotics programs were
initiated because of provisions of Section 907 of the U.S. Freedom Support
Act which prohibits assistance to the Government of Azerbaijan.
The Road Ahead. Working level law enforcement contacts begun in 1998 may
increase, possibly in areas such as legal reform, human rights, counter-
proliferation, and counter-terrorism any of which could also result in
collateral improvements in counternarcotics efforts. Another area of
consideration, which could have direct application, would be U.S.
assistance in demand reduction through non-governmental organizations.
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