China Curbs All Types of Fentanyl, Following US Demands

China says
it will crack down on all types of the synthetic opioid fentanyl, following a
plea from the US.
All
fentanyl-related substances will be added to China's list of controlled
narcotic drugs from 1 May, officials said.
It follows a
pledge Beijing made during US-China trade talks in December.
The powerful
painkiller, much of it believed to be made in China, is said to be driving a huge
rise in drug addiction in the US.
The number
of deaths from painkillers such as fentanyl led to President Donald Trump
declaring a national emergency in 2017.
China's
production of the drug has long been a source of tension between the two
countries.
"The US
is concerned about all variants [of fentanyl] and it has all been
resolved," Liu Yuejin, deputy director of China's narcotics control
commission, told a news conference.
Mr Liu said
the claim that China was the main source of fentanyl "lacked evidence",
and instead blamed a history of abuse of prescription medicine in the US for
fuelling demand.
"We
believe that the United States itself is the main factor in the abuse of
fentanyl there," he said.
"Some
people link drug consumption with freedom, individuality, and liberation. If
the US really wants to resolve the fentanyl substance problem they have more
work to do domestically."
Fentanyl
itself is already on China's list of controlled drugs. Expanding the list to
all fentanyl-related substances is aimed at stopping smugglers from changing
formulas to circumvent the law.
Fentanyl is
estimated to be 50 to 100 times stronger than morphine and is usually only
approved in the US for severe pain arising in cases like treatment for cancer.
The US says
the synthetic drug is being sold on the internet and sent by post from China,
fuelling the opioid crisis.
US
authorities list all fentanyl-related products in the most dangerous class of
drugs.
In 2017, the
US announced the first ever indictments against two Chinese individuals for
conspiracy "to distribute large quantities" of fentanyl as well as
other opioids.
The issue
over fentanyl figured during a trade war between China and the US that erupted
last year.
China's
pledge to control the drug came during a post-G20 summit between the two
countries in Buenos Aires in December.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-
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