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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
INTERNATIONAL NARCOTICS CONTROL STRATEGY REPORT, MARCH 1996: FRANCE

United States Department of State

Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs


FRANCE

I. Summary

France remained an important transit country, particularly for narcotics originating in the Middle East and Southwest Asia. Heroin is the drug of primary concern to the Government of France (GOF), but a dramatic increase in the trafficking and consumption of cocaine in 1995 -- including crack cocaine -- attracted the Government's attention. France remained in the forefront of European countries opposing drug decriminalization.

Proposed legislation, likely to be enacted by the French National Assembly in early 1996, will strengthen criminal penalties for money laundering. The proposed asset seizure law as it relates to laundering of drug proceeds, considered one of the strongest in Western Europe, should prove quite helpful in enforcing French drug control measures.

France produces a variety of precursor and essential chemicals, which the GOF actively monitors and controls through an inter-agency office at French Customs. France adopted the EU's chemical regulations in 1993 and has fully implemented these regulations.

II. Status of Country

Seizure and consumption data from 1994, which were released in the Spring of 1995, suggest growing activity by French narcotics traffickers and consumers. Narcotics data for 1995 will be released in the Spring of 1996. In 1994, arrests for heroin use grew to 17,149 -- an increase of nearly 15% over 1993. Arrests for cocaine/crack cocaine use grew to 1,278 persons in 1994 -- an increase of 25% over 1993. Drug-related deaths increased by 24% in 1994 compared to 1993, mainly from heroin overdoses.

III. Country Actions Against Drugs in 1995

Policy Initiatives. France's new penal code, effective in March 1994, has made drug trafficking punishable by life imprisonment and drug production by a 30-year term. Those accused of directing a drugproducing or drug-trafficking ring face judgment by a special court that handles spy and terrorism cases. Previously, French authorities had classified drug trafficking as a misdemeanor.

In 1995, the GOF maintained a firm stance against narcotics decriminalization. Polls confirmed that most French citizens support the Government's position. Generational differences of opinion about decriminalizing drugs are striking; support for decriminalization is more apparent among the younger generation, from those polled.

Agreements and Treaties. France is a party to the 1988 UN Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances and is complying with the Convention's goals and objectives. The United States Government (USG) and the GOF have narcotics-related agreements, including a 1971 agreement on coordinating action against illicit trafficking. The United States and France have an Extradition Treaty, but French law does not permit the extradition of French citizens. The GOF has, however, formally arranged with the USG and some other countries to prosecute its nationals domestically for extraditable crimes committed elsewhere.

France participates in international drug control fora, including the United Nations International Drug Control Program (UNDCP), the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) and the Dublin Group. Annual French expenditures for overseas counter-narcotics assistance of all types (police training, crop substitution, prevention) totalled approximately $10 million in 1995. According to UNDCP, France had pledged over $900,000 in FY95 contributions to UNDCP, as of early 1996. The French Foreign Ministry's Office of Security Affairs, which monitors terrorism, organized crime, narcotics and money laundering expanded its participation in international drug control organizations in 1995.

Law Enforcement. The Government's enforcement of narcotics laws has remained efficient and effective. Drug trafficking arrests rose to 7,149 in 1994, more than an 11% increase over 1993. Arrests for heroin trafficking increased from 3,395 in 1993 to 3,562 in 1994. Arrests for cocaine trafficking, including crack cocaine, increased 109% in 1994 to 542 persons. Seizures rose sharply over 1993 figures with a 26% increase for cannabis (58,014 kilograms (kg); a 71% increase for heroin (661 kg); and a 166% increase for cocaine (4,742 kg).

Corruption. Public corruption related to drugs is not a problem in France. The USG is not aware of any involvement by senior officials in the production or distribution of drugs, or in the laundering of drug proceeds.

Drug Flow/Transit. France is an important transshipment point for illicit drugs, especially heroin. Heroin is shipped primarily from the Netherlands, Pakistan and Turkey into the French domestic market, and then transshipped to other European markets or North America. According to the GOF, approximately 35 percent of the heroin seized, whose origin could be identified, came from the Netherlands in 1994. Nigerian drug organizations continue to use a variety of nationals to smuggle heroin, via France, to the United States. However, the total amount of heroin transiting France en route to the United States is unknown.

France is also a transit route for hashish originating in Southwest Asia (particularly Pakistan), Lebanon, and North Africa destined for French domestic consumption, European markets, and North America, especially Canada.

France is a growing transshipment point and consumer market for South American cocaine. Criminal groups operating in the Netherlands and southern France near the Spanish and Italian borders supply the French market with cocaine.

Cultivation/Production. According to authorities, the manufacture and cultivation of illicit drugs is not a problem in France.

Demand Reduction. France's drug control agency, the General Delegation for the Fight Against Drugs and Addiction (DGLDT), is responsible for coordinating demand reduction programs. In 1995,the GOF's budget for drug control programs totalled $200 million, nearly a four-fold increase over 1994. Drug education efforts targeted government officials, counselors, teachers, and medical personnel. The GOF continues to expand its experimental methadone treatment program.

France produces amphetamines and reports its production to the International Narcotics Control Board (INCB). As a producer of licit chemicals used to make illicit narcotics, France has continued to improve its cooperation with the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to monitor and control these products.

IV. US Policy Initiatives and Programs

Bilateral Cooperation. The United States and France enjoy excellent counter-narcotics law enforcement cooperation. The French police participate in USG-sponsored money laundering courses and in specialized narcotics training courses. The USG also works with the GOF to provide counter-narcotics assistance to narcotics-producing and transit countries, and is pressing for a bilateral agreement on sharing seized and forfeited assets. During his State visit in February 1996, President Chirac identified closer bilateral and multilateral cooperation with the United States as a high priority for his Government.

The Road Ahead. The United States looks forward to continued close cooperation with France on all counter-narcotic fronts, including in multilateral anti-drug fora such as the Dublin Group, and will work closely with the French in developing a maritime agreement for the Caribbean.

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