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UNODC
UNODC, United Nations Office on
Drugs and Crime in Central Asia

Mr. Masood Karimipour - UNODC
Regional Representative for Central Asia
The United Nations Office on
Drugs and Crime (UNODC) is mandated by international conventions
and UN resolutions to assist Member States in implementing UN
treaties on drug control, transnational organized crime,
corruption, criminal justice reform, suppression of terrorism and
human trafficking. The Regional Office for Central Asia ROCA)
assists the five Central Asian states in reducing the use and trade
of illicit drugs, in fighting organized crime and in preventing and
prosecuting terrorism. The Regional Office is located in Tashkent
and has sub-offices in Bishkek (Kyrgyzstan), Dushanbe (Tajikistan),
Ashgabat (Turkmenistan), Astana as well as Almaty (Kazakhstan) and
Baku (Azerbaijan). With a population of over 27 million, Uzbekistan
is the most populous country in Central Asia and its role in the
region''s stability is pivotal. Reflecting this, UNODC has been in
Uzbekistan since 1993 to help develop the country by addressing
issues that affect the security, safety and health of its
population, particularly young people. Development is unsustainable
unless issues of drug trafficking and abuse, organized crime,
corruption and terrorism are addressed effectively.
Crime Prevention and Human
Trafficking
UNODC ROCA provides assistance in
strengthening the criminal justice response to trafficking in
persons in Uzbekistan through implementation of a national project
which is aimed at
strengthening the capacity of
Uzbek legal mechanisms and law enforcement institutions to prevent,
investigate and prosecute cases of human trafficking, to make
Uzbekistan''s response to trafficking in persons in line with the
UN Convention against Transnational Organized Crime and
its supplementing Protocol to
Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, especially
Women and Children The project activities envisage supporting the
government in its efforts to
strengthen anti-human trafficking
legislation, extensive training to law enforcement and criminal
justice officials establishing a human trafficking database, and
facilitating regional and
international cooperation.
Terrorism Prevention
UNODC also assists the Government
of Uzbekistan to strengthen its legal regime against terrorism by
promoting the ratification and implementation of the UN Conventions
and Protocols and relevant Security Council Resolutions against
terrorism. The scope of assistance provided by UNODC in terrorism
prevention area also includes expanding the legal knowledge base of
criminal justice officials and law enforcement personnel dealing
with counter-terrorism issues, development and updating of
technical assistance tools (Model Laws, Legislative Guides etc.)
and providing of legislative drafting assistance to further
incorporate universal provisions into a national legislation.
Legal Advice
Overcoming these challenges
requires an effective legal and institutional framework. To this
end, UNODC provides expert policy recommendations on law and
infrastructure improvements, in line with the UN Conventions on
drugs, transnational organized crime, corruption and terrorism.
UNODC supports the national partners in their development of
strategies for drug abuse and HIV prevention and treatment; laws to
prevent drug trafficking and prosecute the offenders, prevention of
money laundering; and other legal issues that address extradition
and international legal cooperation. In tandem with promoting the
Conventions through the legislative process, UNODC provides
trainings to criminal justice officials and law enforcement
personnel involved in legislative drafting so that these
individuals may better understand the purposes served through these
Conventions.
Drug Demand Reduction and HIV
Prevention
In addition to trafficking of
illicit opiates from Afghanistan, Uzbekistan also faces the
challenge of increasing drug abuse, especially injecting drug use,
which, in turn, fuels the spread of HIV and other blood borne
infections. To address the problem of drug abuse and HIV, UNODC has
initiated programmes that enhance national capacity to prevent drug
abuse, to provide treatment and support services to drug-dependent
persons, to reduce the spread of HIV among injecting drug users and
in prison settings in conformity with relevant international
conventions and the established mandates of UNODC. The training
programmes in this area provide the personnel with the ability and
expertise to establish and provide a broad range of services,
including (1) outreach interventions for the prevention of HIV and
other blood-borne infections among injecting drug users and (2)
Treatment of drug dependent persons. UNODC also provides training
and educational materials aimed at prevention of drug use and HIV
infection especially among young people.
Effective data analysis
UNODC issues authoritative
reports based on drug crop surveys, drug addiction data and trend
analysis, which are relied on by governments, experts, the media,
etc. The Regional Office for Central Asia has developed this
expertise to a high caliber, contributing to powerful
knowledge-based policy analysis.
Drug Supply Reduction
A substantial portion of the
heroin produced in Afghanistan transits Central Asia. To help
Uzbekistan tackle the negative effects of this illicit trade, UNODC
assists national law enforcement agencies to improve border control
and increase their operational anti-trafficking capacity. Projects
provide equipment and training tailored to the specific challenges
faced by Uzbekistan in dealing with international and indigenous
drug smuggling and are also used to promote inter-regional
operations involving countries in the region. The Hayraton
Friendship Bridge to Afghanistan provides a prime example of this
assistance. The project equipped the bridge and border control
personnel with modern equipment that enhances trade while also
guarding against illicit trafficking. UNODC has also assisted
Uzbekistan in the development of drug information collection and
analysis by installing national drug trafficking intelligence
analysis systems in agencies with drug control responsibilities and
linking the country to the regional information collection and
dissemination centre (CARICC).
CARICC, or to use its full title,
"the Central Asian Regional Information and Coordination Centre" is
a further example of UNODC''s work in the region.. The purpose of
the Centre, which was established along the lines of Europol, the
EU''s law enforcement agency, is to facilitate information exchange
and analysis, and to assist in the coordination of operational
activities of the various law enforcement agencies in the region -
police, drug control agencies, customs, border guards and other
services of the countries involved.
UNODC Regional Office''s project
portfolio for 2008 comes to around 9 million dollars. The most
active donors supporting UNODC''s programs in the sub-region are
governments of Austria, Finland, Italy, Russia, Sweden, the United
Kingdom and the USA, as well as the NATO-Russia Council and the
European Commission. UNODC often partners with other UN agencies
(UNESCO, UNFPA, UNICEF, etc), the OSCE and local authorities to
effectively address the different drugs and crime related issues in
the region.
Main partners:
In drug abuse
prevention:
• Ministries of Public Education
in CA countries; Ministries of Health in CA countries;
• Narcological dispensaries in CA
countries;
• AIDS centers in CA
countries;
• NGOs;
• UNICEF,
• UNFPA,
• UNESCO,
• WHO,
• UNAIDS,
• World Bank.
In the fight against illicit
drugs and international crime:
• United nations Development
Programme (UNDP);
• Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development (OECD);
• International Criminal Police
Organization (Interpol);
• Drug Control Agencies in CA
countries;
• Customs committees in CA
countries;
• Ministries of Internal Affairs
in CA countries;
• National Security Services in
CA countries; Border services in CA countries
In terrorism
prevention:
• Regional Anti-Terrorist
Structure/Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO);
• Collective Security Treaty
Organization (CSTO);
• CIS Antiterroristic
centre;
• Parliamentary committees on
defense and security;
• National Security
Services;
• Organization for Security and
Co-operation in Europe (OSCE);
• Organization for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW);
• The Counter-Terrorism Committee
Executive Directorate (CTED)/Counter-Terrorism Committee
(CTC);
• Offices of Public Prosecutor in
CA countries;
• Supreme Courts in CA
countries;
• Departments of Justice in CA
countries
Contact information:
UNODC
Tashkent, Uzbekistan
30a, Abdulla Kahhor
Street
Tel. (+ 998 71) 120 80 50
Fax (+ 998 71) 120 62 90
Website:
www.unodc.org/uzbekistan







