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U.S. Department of State
1997 International Narcotics Control Strategy Report, March 1998
United States Department of State
Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs
Europe and Central Asia
RUSSIA
I. Summary
Russia experienced a marked increase in narcotics cases in
1997. Empowered by the changes in the criminal code which came into effect
January 1, 1997, Russian police handled 80 percent more drug cases
nationwide in 1997 than in 1996, according to the Ministry of Internal
Affairs (MVD). The biggest operation conducted in Russia in 1997 involved a
200-kilogram shipment of cocaine from Venezuela (partially) seized in the
city of Bratsk in southern Siberia with the cooperation of British law
enforcement. Poppy straw and cannabis products predominate drug trafficking
cases, but domestic consumption of cocaine, heroin, amphetamines and
synthetics--drugs formerly largely destined for foreign markets--has
increased. Organized crime elements are finding their way into the
international drug trade, primarily in areas such as distribution and money
laundering. Lack of effective regulation in the banking, financial and
commercial sectors provide favorable conditions for money laundering, but
there is insufficient information to determine how much of the money
illicitly filtering through the system is derived from narcotics
trafficking. Limited resources hamper government drug control
efforts. Russia is a party to the 1988 UN Drug Convention.
II. Status of Country
Greater openness since the break-up of the Soviet Union has made Russia
a prime conduit for illicit drugs, largely destined for western European
markets. Russia is also a minor producer of illicit amphetamines, cannabis
and opium poppy, mostly supplying domestic consumption. For the domestic
market, illicit drugs primarily come from the country's immediate neighbors
in the form of cannabis, opium and opium derivatives. Asian heroin and
South American cocaine, however, are also part of the problem. The number
of registered drug users continued to grow. Mini-Dublin Group information
indicates that cocaine consumption in Moscow has reached 10 kilograms per
day.
Ethnic Russian criminal groups control most narcotics trafficking and
distribution in the country, with the active participation of members of
ethnic groups from around the New Independent States and other
countries. Control over various types of drugs continues to be divided
among different groups who have established proprietary niches, often to
avoid disputes. In general, Afghans, Tajiks and other central Asians
traffic heroin, opium and opium derivatives in European Russia and western
Siberia, while Vietnamese and Chinese traffic the drugs through eastern
Siberia; Ukrainians center on cannabis; Nigerians and other Africans
predominate in cocaine; and Azerbaijanis in the synthetic drug market.
The lack of effective border controls with Mongolia and China has
facilitated an increase in international drug trafficking through that
region. Exploiting international air links, Nigerian and South American
traffickers continue to route cocaine through Moscow and other major
Russian cities.
Russian authorities suspect that the privatization of chemical
laboratories may have led to the use of such facilities for illicit
purposes. The country's well-developed chemical industry is also a possible
conduit for illicit drug operations. The industry exports small quantities
of precursor and essential chemicals, primarily acetic anhydride, to
industries in eastern Europe and Finland. Penalties for diversion of
chemicals are relatively weak and ineffective.
III. Country Actions Against Drugs in 1997
Policy Initiatives. Russia focused its counternarcotics efforts on
strengthening legislation and enforcing existing laws. The new criminal
code empowered law enforcement agencies to act more effectively against
drugs with provisions penalizing production, possession, sale and transport
of narcotics. Possession of small amounts of drugs is treated as a
misdemeanor. The MVD also tasked its personnel across the board to pursue
drug offenders. A stricter counternarcotics law is under consideration in
the state Duma (Parliament).
To better address the problem of money laundering, the Government of
Russia (GOR) reintroduced in the Duma draft legislation in October. The
draft passed its first reading in mid-November and the two subsequent
requisite readings are scheduled for December. Similar legislation failed
to pass in 1996, coming in some 20 votes shy of the number needed for
approval. At present, only Article 174 of the Criminal Code addresses money
laundering.
Recognizing the threat of cross-border crime, including drug
trafficking, the Office of the Procurator General has authorized
prosecutors from border regions to work directly with their neighboring
counterparts. The Procuracy also hosted a regional conference in December
which prosecutors and other high-ranking law enforcement representatives
from throughout the NIS attended. In April, Russia co-sponsored a
conference with the UNDCP in which the GOR highlighted the severe budgetary
and economic restraints which hamper GOR counternarcotics efforts.
Law Enforcement Efforts. In March 1997, Internal Affairs Minister
Kulikov was tasked by the President to coordinate the efforts of law
enforcement agencies against organized crime. In his capacity as one of the
country's Deputy Prime Ministers, Kulikov can conduct joint operations with
the Federal Tax Service, the Tax Police, Customs Committee personnel and
the Committee on (hard) Currency and Export Control (VEK). Russian police
handled 80 percent more drug cases nationwide in 1997 than in 1996,
according to the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD), bringing the total to
150,000 in the first ten months of 1997. In some parts of the country, the
increase was higher. Drug cases in the city of St. Petersburg, for example,
rose by 120 percent. In the Russian far east, in regions bordering Mongolia
and China, drug cases increased three-fold. The biggest operation conducted
in Russia in 1997 involved a 200-kilogram shipment of cocaine from
Venezuela seized in the city of Bratsk in southern Siberia with the
cooperation of British law enforcement.
Cultivation and Production. Although there are no official
statistics on the extent of opium cultivation, the USG has no evidence to
suggest that mroe than 1,000 hectares of opium are cultivated. Wild
cannabis is estimated to cover some 1.5 million hectares in the eastern
part of the country. The USG has no evidence that 5,000 hectares or more
are being harvested, but we will, of course, continue to monitor this
situation.
Corruption. There have been no reported cases of
narcotics-related corruption that facilitates the production, processing,
or shipment of narcotic and psychotropic drugs and other controlled
substances or that discourages the investigation or prosecution of such
acts. A draft law on corruption passed its first Duma reading in the
fall. Non-narcotic related corruption is becoming more manifest at lower
and mid-levels of government and law enforcement agencies, according to the
MVD. More than 5,000 bribery cases were handled by the MVD in the first ten
months of 1997, an 8 percent increase over the similar period in
1996. There were more than 3,000 cases involving police officers.
In Tajikistan, drug trafficking groups have established links with
elements of the Russian and Tajik border guards.
Demand Reduction. Drug abuse prevention, treatment, and public
awareness programs are limited. Scholastic counternarcotics education
programs are generally conducted only in Moscow and other major
cities. Some non-governmental organizations now sponsor demand reduction
programs around the country.
Agreements and Treaties. Russia is a party to the 1988 UN Drug
Convention, the 1961 UN Single Convention and its 1972 Protocol, and the
1971 UN Convention on Psychotropic Substances. In 1995, the Russian Border
Service concluded an agreement with Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan to reinforce
trilateral counternarcotics cooperation on the borders with Afghanistan,
Pakistan and Iran. A Customs Union consisting of Russia, Kazakhstan and
Belarus was also established in 1995. Russia is a party to the 1992 Kiev
Treaty on Cooperation in Inter-Regional Drug Investigations.
A Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) on counternarcotics cooperation
signed between the US and the Soviet Union in January, 1989 remains in
force. Also in force is an agreement signed between the two countries a
year later, in January 1990. The Russian Border Service concluded an MOU
with the US Coast Guard in 1995 which includes provisions for maritime drug
interdiction. In February 1996, an Executive Agreement on Mutual Legal
Assistance between Russia and the US entered into force. In its Annex, the
Executive Agreement addresses illicit traffic in narcotics and psychotropic
substances as well as money laundering. Russia and the US have completed
two rounds of negotiations of a Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT) and
hope to conclude the negotiations soon. There is no Extradition Treaty in
force between Russia and the United States. Although the United States has
agreed to enter into extradition discussions after the conclusion of the
MLAT, there are many difficult issues that will be faced including, but not
limited to, the fact that the Russian Constitution prohibits the
extradition of nationals. Russia is a party to the WCO's International
Convention on Mutual Administrative Assistance for the Prevention,
Investigation, and Repression of Customs Offences "Nairobi Convention"
Annex X on Assistance in Narcotics Cases. The USG has concluded a Customs
Mutual Assistance Agreement (CMAA) with the Government of Russia.
IV. US Policy Initiatives and Programs
Bilateral Cooperation. The principal US goal is to assist Russia in
integrating its counternarcotics efforts into international efforts against
drug trafficking and to strengthen Russian institutions to address the
problem domestically. The US requires that assistance agreements provide
that the receiving country exempt assistance from duty and tax. Cooperative
efforts were facilitated by the expansion of the DEA office in Moscow and
training by numerous US law enforcement agencies. The US trained police,
customs, border service and procuracy personnel throughout the year, with
an emphasis on organized crime, narcotics trafficking and money
laundering. As part of this program, more than 3,300 officials have been
trained in Russia, the US, and the International Law Enforcement Academy
(ILEA) in Budapest since 1994.
A US-Russia Agreement to provide drug control assistance, equipment and
training has stalled. The draft Agreement provides that the receiving
country should exempt assistance from duty and tax. This provision falls
outside existing Russian legislation, according to the GOR, and it
therefore cannot commit to such an obligation. Tax legislation which may
open the way is under consideration in the Russian legislature.
The Road Ahead. The USG will continue to work with Russia as it
expands its counternarcotics efforts. Greater inroads can be expected as
Russia moves to develop the legislative base through which to address drug
trafficking at home and abroad. The US will also continue to provide
training aimed at strengthening institutions and law enforcement
efforts.
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