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Inside the largest known lab making billions for the Assad regime

Caroline Rose, director of the New York-based New Lines Institute Captagon Trade Project, said the global trade in the drug has an estimated value of $US10 billion ($15.7 billion) and put the ousted Syrian leadership’s annual profit from it at about $US2.4 billion.

The now-deposed Syrian president Bashar al-Assad (right) and his brother Maher (centre) at the funeral of their father, Hafez al-Assad, in Damascus in 2000.Credit: AP

Rose, whose organisation tracks all publicly recorded captagon seizures and lab raids, said the site seen by Reuters appeared to be one of the biggest captagon labs ever found.

“It’s very possible that it’s the biggest one that existed in regime-held Syria,” she said.

“Up until the regime fell, there was not a single incident of a laboratory seizure on the database in regime-held territories.”

Barrels, boxes and bottles

Inside was a pill-press and, in the warehouse above, dozens of barrels, boxes and bottles of different chemicals.

Rebels showed reporters the factory and the chemicals used to produce the pills.

Rebels showed reporters the factory and the chemicals used to produce the pills.Credit: AP

They included chloroform, potassium iodide, formaldehyde solution, ammonia solution, acetic acid, hydrochloric acid, cyclohexanone and petroleum ether 40-60 degrees C.

The chemicals were produced in countries including Britain, China, India, Oman, Saudi Arabia and Lebanon, according to the labels.

Captagon was the brand name of a stimulant first produced in Germany in the 1960s to help treat attention conditions including deficit disorders and narcolepsy.

It was discontinued, but an illicit version of the drug known as “poor man’s cocaine” continued to be produced in Eastern Europe and later in the Arab world, becoming prominent in the conflict that erupted in Syria following anti-government protests in 2011.

Machines used to manufacture captagon pills at the old chip factory in Douma, Syria.

Machines used to manufacture captagon pills at the old chip factory in Douma, Syria.Credit: AP

It generates focus and staves off sleep and hunger. It has been banned in many countries, including the United States, and can have harmful side effects. Its prevalence has led to growing drug abuse in Gulf Arab states.

From Captain Korn to captagon

Syrian businessman Fares al-Tout said his family had owned the factory before Syria’s civil war, when it was built to produce potato chips branded Captain Korn.

Captagon pills were hidden inside export products such as this melon, as well as pomegranates, machine parts and even doors.

Captagon pills were hidden inside export products such as this melon, as well as pomegranates, machine parts and even doors.Credit: AP

He said it was seized in 2018 by a businessman close to Maher, Amer al-Khiti.

“They flipped it from the production of food to the production of captagon that killed Syria’s children in support of the Fourth Division,” Tout said.

The US imposed sanctions on Khiti in 2020 over his ties to the Assad authorities. Britain imposed sanctions on him in 2023, saying he “operates and controls multiple businesses in Syria which facilitate the production and smuggling of drugs, including captagon”.

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Khiti could not immediately be reached for comment.

A Reuters reporter on the scene found electoral pamphlets for Syria’s People’s Assembly, its legislature, lying on the floor, with Khiti listed as one of the candidates, as well as separate electoral cards with just his name on them.

In the days since Assad’s fall, rebel fighters say they have found several sites across the country where the drug was produced and prepared for export.

They have sometimes set fire to the pills or poured them down drains, according to videos shared online by accounts affiliated with them.

Reuters

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  • Source of information and images “brisbanetimes”

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