Despite heightened crackdowns and stricter punishments following new anti-narcotics legislation, drug abuse remains widespread in North Korea, particularly among officials. A source in Kangwon province reported that an increasing number of officials from powerful agencies, including local party committees and security ministries, are both using and distributing methamphetamines and opium for profit.
Officials are becoming entangled in drug deals both to secure their own supply and because dealers deliberately target them for protection, with some officials even promoting drug use at social gatherings.
Daily NK has reported that 1 gram of methamphetamine — called ice or bingdu in North Korea — sells for about 150 yuan. That sum is worth about 300,000 North Korean won and can purchase about 42 kilograms of rice, which costs around 7,000 won a kilogram.
A gram of methamphetamine (known locally as “ice” or “bingdu”) costs about 150 yuan ($21) inside North Korea—equivalent to 300,000 North Korean won, or enough to buy 42 kilograms of rice. Unable to afford these prices, some officials have turned to trafficking. The same gram sells for 2,000-3,000 yuan ($280-420) in China, prompting officials to coordinate with North Korean trade representatives there to export the drug for a tenfold profit.
Since officials from provincial trading companies and individual agencies have engaged in relatively brisk trading activities since Kim Jong Un’s “20×10 regional development policy” was launched early this year, attempts to use this opportunity to smuggle North Korean drugs to China are growing, the source said.
The problem is that with officials deeply enmeshed in the drug trade, North Korea’s anti-drug crime law has been rendered ineffective.
In 2021, the 15th plenary meeting of the Standing Committee of the 14th Supreme People’s Assembly enacted an anti-drug law that stipulated a maximum penalty of death for illegally gathering, manufacturing or smuggling drugs.
“The reason the drug problem only gets worse is that the people buying drugs are officials,” the source said. “Even the central government is aware that drug addiction is growing more serious, but can’t do a thing about it.”
Drugs are such a severe problem in North Korea that even high school students ingest them.
Daily NK works with a network of sources in North Korea, China, and elsewhere. For security reasons, their identities remain anonymous.
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November 15, 2024 at 12:34PM
by DailyNK(North Korean Media)