Welcome to 2024, where an Opium shortage is a bad thing.

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The Taliban ban on opium production in Afghanistan, the world’s biggest supplier of the drug, could drive up the use of synthetic opioids in its stead, consequently increasing overdose deaths, the UN drug agency warned on Wednesday.

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said in its annual drug report that opium production fell globally by around 74% last year. The Taliban banned opium production in 2022.

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While the agency said there were still “no real shortages” of the drug in the main destination markets as of yet, it warned that this would become an inevitability should its curtailed production continue.

The opium poppy is the key source of many narcotics, including heroin.

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The UNODC is particularly worried that heroin users will instead resort to the use of nitazenes, a type of highly potent, synthetic opioid that leads to overdose deaths. Users could even buy what they think is heroin only for it to have been cut with far cheaper and more potent nitazenes.

www.dw.com/en/un-drug-agency-warns-of-opium-shortage-amid-taliban-ban/a-69479666

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