
China's Hubei province arrests 7, shuts websites in fentanyl crackdown
ABC News
A Chinese province has intensified a crackdown on fentanyl precursor trafficking, an issue that strained U.S.-China relations and prompted tariffs on imports from China
BEIJING -- A Chinese province has launched a crackdown on the fentanyl trade — a contentious issue in U.S.-China relations — arresting seven people and shutting down more than 200 websites in recent months, state media reported Thursday.
The announcement came shortly after U.S. President Donald Trump said he would postpone a highly anticipated trip to China because of the Iran War. Trump has used tariffs to try to pressure China to do more to stem the export of fentanyl precursors — the chemical ingredients that go into the synthetic opioid blamed for tens of thousands of overdose deaths annually in the U.S.
The Hubei Daily News said in an online report that a fentanyl precursor task force established in December had investigated 22 cases in Hubei province through February. Besides the seven arrested, a dozen other people have been subjected to “coercive measures,” which can include being summoned or detained. Four companies have been penalized, the newspaper said.
The official Xinhua News Agency issued a similar report. It said the task force had been set up to follow a directive from China's Ministry of Public Security. The operation followed an agreement by China at the end of October to take steps to stop the precursor trade in return for a halving of the fentanyl-related tariff on U.S. imports from China to 10%.
In one case, information from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency helped police in Wuhan, the provincial capital, discover that a company was selling precursor chemicals as well as stimulants, the Hubei Daily News said. The person who controls the company was arrested in early December with the cooperation of police in another province, Shandong, the newspaper said.













