Australia issues warning about deadly new drug hitting streets

8 July 2024 07:18 am Views - 131

Police at the highest level are cracking down on deadly drugs that have been cut with the synthetic opioid Nitazene, which have already claimed at least 20 lives in Australia.

Nitazenes are a group of synthetic opioids that are made up of several different types of drugs including protonitazene and metonitazene.

The drug is usually laced in other substances including MDMA, ketamine, cocaine and methamphetamine, leaving those who consume it unaware they're at risk.

Australian Federal Police Commander Paula Hudson urged everyone to be aware of the dangers of consuming Nitazenes, which is 1000 times more potent than morphine.

'Nitazenes have authorities very, very concerned, and we want to get the message out there to the community that what they're taking may not be what they're thinking it is,' Ms Hudson told 60 Minutes on Sunday.

'Nitazene is on the streets at the moment, so be very careful. Know the signs of overdose, and be prepared.'

 The chilling warning comes as Victoria Police continue their investigation into the deaths of four people in Broadmeadows, Melbourne, last month.

The bodies of Michael Hodgkinson, 32, Abdul El Sayed, 17, were found along with a 37-year-old man and a 42-year-old woman following a suspected drug overdose.

The deaths are still being treated as non-suspicious at this time.

Victoria police said preliminary tests have confirmed the presence of a synthetic opioid in the system of all four people.

However, there was no presence of fentanyl detected during the initial testing, police confirmed.

With 20 deaths and dozens of overdoses already reported in Australia, health authorities and experts are now on high alert for Nitazene. 

Uniting Medically Supervised Injecting Centre's medical director Dr Marianne Jauncey told the Herald Sun she was concerned the synthetic opioid detected in the Broadmeadows deaths was a type of Nitazene.

Dr Jauncey said it was imperative drug checking services became more accessible.

'I think it's frightening that we don't know where to look next,' she said.

'At the moment, we aren't going to know unless people continue to overdose or die.

'Without things like drug checking, it's hard to know what's going on.

'If you're not looking, you're not going to find it. We need to be looking more. We need to heighten our surveillance.'

Ms Hudson said the rise of Nitazenes throughout the community isn't unsurprising, after the AFP intercepted 37 parcels containing the synthetic opioid in mail shipments in the last year.

She said four kilos were found in Melbourne during a search warrant last week.

'That's of great concern to us,' Ms Hudson said.

'What the public needs to be aware of is that two milligrams can be lethal.

'So even though we might seize 30 grams, that's enough for 25,000 lethal doses.'

However, experts believe Nitazenes are produced in China, where it was previously legal to make the drug.

The Chinese government has since committed to cracking down on the production of the drug.
'The Chinese authorities will be able to actually enforce the regulation of Nitazenes through the fact that they have now been listed as a controlled substance,' Commissioner Hudson said.

'That will certainly equip us with much greater leverage offshore to work to prevent Nitazenes from flowing down into Australia.'

Meanwhile, the Victorian Department of Health issued an alert for the synthetic opioid Protonitazene last week.

'There have been recent serious harms in Melbourne associated with a white powder sold as cocaine that contained protonitazene,' the alert stated.

'The product appears to produce strong adverse effects such as loss of consciousness, respiratory depression, and life-threatening hypoxia (insufficient oxygen for normal functioning).' (Daily Mail)