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Opium Poppy
Foreign sources of opium are
responsible for the entire supply of heroin consumed in the U.S. Efforts to
reduce domestic heroin availability face significant problems. Unlike cocaine,
which is concentrated in South America, opium production occurs in three source
regions—Southeast Asia, Southwest Asia, and Latin America- creating a worldwide
problem. While an undetermined amount of the opium is consumed in the producing
regions, a significant amount of the drug is converted to heroin and sent to
Europe and North America.
Historically, most of the world's illicit opium for heroin has been grown in the
Golden Triangle of Southeast Asia. However, Latin America has emerged, in recent
years, as the primary supplier of heroin to the United States. Colombian and
Mexican heroin comprises 60 and 24 percent respectively of the heroin seized
today in the United States. Low-level opium-poppy cultivation in Venezuela and
even more limited growing in Peru currently produce only marginal amounts of
heroin but could become the foundation for an expanding opium and heroin
industry beyond Colombia. Opium-poppy cultivation in Venezuela is limited to the
mountains opposite Colombia's growing area and appears to be a spillover from
cultivation on the Colombian side of the border. Reports indicate that opium
poppy cultivation in Peru over the last several years is nearly negligible.
With long-established trafficking and distribution networks and exclusive
markets for black tar and brown powder heroin, Mexico's hold on the U.S. heroin
market in the West seems secure. Mexico grows only about two percent of the
world's illicit opium, but virtually the entire crop is converted into heroin
for the U.S. market. Opium cultivation and production in Mexico have been
relatively stable through most of the 1990s.
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Poppy Plants |
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