For information only - not an official document

UNIS/NAR/1257
26 November 2015

Drug money and opiate trafficking on Balkan route, focus of new UNODC report

VIENNA, 26 November (UN Information Service) - A new report launched today by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) shows that the total value of illicit heroin and opium trafficked from Afghanistan to Western Europe through the Balkans amounts to some US$28 billion every year. Sixty-five per cent of this total (US$18 billion) is generated in Western and Central Europe. The four largest European markets for heroin - France, the United Kingdom, Germany, and Italy - account for nearly half of the gross profits, as the major heroin benefits are made by traffickers on the retail markets.

The report, entitled Drug Money: the illicit proceeds of opiates trafficked on the Balkan route, shows that the total value generated by Afghan heroin and opium trafficked in Europe and through the Balkan route is one third bigger than the entire GDP of Afghanistan itself, which, in 2014, amounted to some US$21 billion. Other findings indicate that the negative economic impact of heroin and opium is greater in Europe and the Balkan route countries than in Afghanistan itself.

The report also shows Iran and Turkey as the two countries which intercept the greater percentage of heroin and opium destined for Europe. Iran seizes about 30 per cent of the 155 tons of heroin and opium entering its territory every year, while Turkey seizes 17 per cent. All other countries in Europe intercept an average of six per cent of heroin in their territory. Data show that the impact of illicit profits in the national licit economy across countries is significant, with heroin and opium traffickers gaining between 0.2 to two per cent of their country's GDP. For some countries this share is bigger than the public expenditures dedicated to drug policies - if all drugs, and not only heroin and opium, are considered. The large amounts of money generated through this illicit activity can distort the licit national economies in the region.

The launch of the report coincides with a new UNODC Regional Programme for South Eastern Europe, which was also unveiled today as one of the Office's responses in assisting countries in interdicting illicit financial flows. At the launch, the UNODC Executive Director, Yury Fedotov, noted that information such as that contained in the new report is crucial to UNODC's work in the region. "UNODC is experienced at undertaking research that builds a detailed picture of the problem, while assisting Member States through effective and tailored projects and programmes," he said.  He  noted that by providing a detailed analysis, "the report can strengthen our evidence base for effective action in South Eastern Europe."

Set to run from 2016 to 2019, the Regional Programme will cover a wide range of activities, including: countering illicit drug trafficking and transnational organized crime; strengthening criminal justice, integrity and legal cooperation; and prevention treatment and care. Its work is undertaken in collaboration with Government partners and civil society, recognizing the challenges related to the links between illicit drug trafficking and organized crime and terrorists and extremists. It ultimately aims to strengthen local law enforcement to help combat these phenomena.

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Further information:

- Full report download: 'Drug Money: the illicit proceeds of opiates trafficked on the Balkan route'

- UNODC in South Eastern Europe

- UNODC's data and analysis work

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For more information, please contact:

Carlos Gomez del Campo
Associate Public Information Officer: UNODC 
Email: carlos.gomezdelcampo[at]unodc.org