publish time

10/07/2024

author name Arab Times

publish time

10/07/2024

This photo released by Mexico’s National Security Commission shows bags of illegal drugs, including 100 pounds (45.5 kilograms) of fentanyl, according to authorities, inside a sports utility vehicle after police stopped the car for a missing front license plate near Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico on Jan 25, 2018. (AP)

MEXICO CITY, July 10, (AP): Even as Mexican-made fentanyl continues to flood into the United States, Mexico’s efforts to seize the drug have declined dramatically, according to figures released Tuesday by the Defense Department.
Figures for the first half of 2024 show that Mexican federal forces seized only 286 pounds (130 kilograms) of fentanyl nationwide between January and June, down 94% from the 5,135 pounds (2,329 kilograms) seized in 2023.
The synthetic opioid has been blamed for about 70,000 overdose deaths annually in the United States, and US officials have tried to step up efforts to seize it as it comes over the border, often in the form of counterfeit pills made in Mexico.
But rather than join in the effort, Mexico's Army and National Guard appeared to have refocused their attention far more toward seizing methamphetamines, which are much more widely consumed domestically in Mexico than fentanyl.
Mexico seized a record of over 400 tons of meth in 2023, more than 12 times what it seized in 2022. That pace appeared to continue in the first half of 2024, with 168 tons of methamphetamines seized.
While Mexican meth is exported widely to the United States - and also causes huge addiction problems there - unlike fentanyl, a huge amount of meth is also sold inside Mexico.
Mexico's Defense Department did not explain why seizures of the two drugs have changed so dramatically. Some observers say the uptick in meth seizures may be the result of increasing internal disputes between the "Mayitos” and "Chapitos” factions of the Sinaloa cartel, the largest producer of meth in Mexico.
Because they belonged to the same drug trafficking networks, analysts say the two factions may have become willing and able to "drop a dime” and inform authorities about the location of their rivals' meth labs and shipments.
But the sharp drop in fentanyl seizures appears to be harder to explain. After all, there is pressure from the United States to stem the smuggling.
The US Embassy did not immediately respond to a request for comment.