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EASY
MONEY
The picturesque islands of the Caribbean are neither major producers
nor consumers of illegal drugs. However, they are located at
the centre of the drug shipment route that goes form South to
North America. Those who think this is the road to "easy money"
should think again...
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WINNER
TAKES ALL
In two Caribbean countries, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago,
the governments are seizing the large real estate properties
of drug lords and converting them into rehabilitation centres.
Even the drug dealers' limousines are taken and turned into
ambulances for the victims of the drug trade!
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END GAME
The battle to stop the trade of illegal drugs doesn't end with
the traffickers. In this episode, addicts talk about their efforts
to break the losing streak of drug dependency.
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UPPING THE ANTE
This programme reviews the patterns of illegal drug trading
in and through the Caribbean region, revealing the initiatives
of governments and private groups in raising the stakes for
drug traffickers.
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THE
WORLD DRUG PROBLEM: MONEY LAUNDERING (Part I)
The United
Nations estimates the global trade in illicit drugs to be worth
$400 billion a year. Those who profit from this illegal trade
must find ways to make their profits appear to be legitimate
in origin, a process known as money laundering. In this programme,
we look at some of the ways "unclean" money is laundered and
at what the United Nations, the international community and
individual states are doing to prevent, detect and prosecute
the crime of money laundering.
Perspective
25/98
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THE
WORLD DRUG PROBLEM: MONEY LAUNDERING (Part II)
The practice
of money laundering has been defined as finding a way to make
illicitly earned funds appear to be legally earned Income. The
1988 United Nations Convention against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic
Drugs and Psychotropic Substances brought the issue of money
laundering onto the world agenda, outlining a series of measures
Member States should take to counter the practice. But according
to Pino Arlaachi, Executive Director of the United Nations International
Drug Control Programme, to date, fewer than 40 countries have
fully complied with the Convention and other international standards.
Perspective
28/98
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HELPING
TEENAGERS BEAT DRUG ADDICTION
An U.S.
expert on adolescent chemical dependency talks about her approach
to teenage drug addiction recovery and about her work in Russia.
Scope 28/98
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ALTERNATIVE
DEVELOPMENT ELIMINATES OPIUM CULTIVATION
IN THE
HIGHLANDS OF THAILAND
A crop substitution
project sponsored by the German government succeeds in curtailing
illicit drug production and raising farmers' incomes.
Scope 29/98
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THE
IMPACT OF WOMEN OF THE UN DECLARATION ON DRUGS
Where and
how do women fit in the attempt to reduce the supply and demand
of illicit drugs worldwide.
Women 26/98
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OPIUM
PRODUCTION IN PAKISTAN DROPS TO RECORD LOW LEVELS
The UN's
latest report on drug use shows some encouraging statistics
about drug control efforts in Pakistan. Opium output is down
to record low levels dropping from 800 metric tonnes in 1979
to 27 tonnes in 1998. In this programme we'll hear from the
man in charge of the UN's drug control efforts in Pakistan.
He describes how the UN's drug control agency is working with
farmers to provide them alternative crops to the lucrative poppy
plant. And later on, does marijuana have medicinal value? The
UN's drug agency says research should be conducted to settle
the issue once and for all.
UN CALLING
ASIA 09/99
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INTERNATIONAL
LEADERS VOW TO CONQUER THE DRUG PROBLEM IN TEN YEARS
At the
UN drug summit, 150 countries pledged to reduce the demand for
a supply of illicit drugs by the year 2008. In this programme
we'll talk to Mr. Rafiqul Islam, Bangladesh's Minister of Home
Affairs, who headed up his country's delegation to the summit.
Bangladesh, because of its location, is a transit area for drug
trafficking. Minister Islam describes how Bangladesh tackles
its drug problems by increasing surveillance at its borders
and coastline and by raising awareness about the danger of drugs.
And later in the programme, is there a relationship between
domestic violence and drug abuse? One non-profit organization
working in India says there is.
UN CALLING
ASIA 26/98
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THE
GLAMORIZATION OF ILLEGAL DRUGS IS SENDING THE WRONG MESSAGE TO
YOUNG PEOPLE
Some experts
believe the world environment has become tolerant and even favourable
towards drug abuse. In this programme a senior member of the
UN's Narcotics Control Board criticizes some contemporary pop
stars and athletes for promoting the recreational use of drugs
as an acceptable part of a person's lifestyle. The difficulties
this glamorization of drugs is posing to efforts to combat drug
abuse will also be discussed.
UN CALLING
ASIA 15/98
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