‘First’ captagon lab found in Iraq

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BAGHDAD (AFP) – Iraq said on Sunday it has found a site in a province bordering Saudi Arabia where captagon is produced, a rare discovery in a country that has become a transit route for the illicit drug.

“Today, and maybe for the first time, a laboratory where captagon is produced was found,” Interior Ministry spokesman General Saad Maan said in a video posted online.

Iraq has long been a transit country for captagon, the amphetamine-like stimulant plaguing the Middle East, but officials said it has also become a consumer market.

The laboratory was discovered in the southern province of Muthana, a statement from the ministry said.

The ministry did not announce any arrests but said the site contained machines capable of producing captagon pills as well as 27.5 kilogrammes of raw materials.

Iraqi authorities have stepped up raids that have netted large amounts of captagon.

But Sunday’s announcement appears to be a game changer, according to Maan, who said finding the laboratory shows that there is a “bid by some to launch (captagon) production in the country”.

On Friday, Iraqi security forces said they had dismantled an “international drug trafficking ring” and arrested three of its members in Muthana province. Two million captagon pills were also seized. Syria said at an Arab foreign ministers meeting in May that it was ready to “strengthen cooperation” with Jordan and Iraq, “affected by drug-trafficking and smuggling across the Syrian border”.

File photo shows a street in Iraq’s capital Baghdad. PHOTO: AFP