Days after the fall of Bashar Assad’s regime in Syria, more information is coming out about how the regime used the sale of drugs, particularly one found on the black market. Syrian rebels discovered millions of pills of Captagon, a banned drug previously prescribed for ADHD and narcolepsy.
The drug, known for its effects on increasing focus and energy, is one of the most common illicit drugs in Syria and the Middle East region.
A fighter with Syria’s ruling Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) rebel group said the factory was linked to the former president’s brother and has been accused of being a kingpin in the black-market Captagon trade.
The drug was a huge part of Syria’s economy, bringing in billions for the fallen regime.
A 2022 investigation by the French outlet AFP found Syria to be the world’s largest narco state, with Captagon becoming its largest export, more so than all of its legal exports combined.
An HTS fighter said the rebels burned the supplies they found, citing the harm of the drug to the Syrian public.
However, experts on illicit drugs say even when authorities crack down on manufacturing, other ones pop up shortly thereafter. That means that the destruction of the newly discovered haul will probably only disrupt the market for Captagon for a short time.