Names Diamorphine is the
international nonproprietary name and the
British Approved Name. Other synonyms for heroin include: diacetylmorphine, and morphine diacetate. Heroin is also known by many street names including Big H, Black Tar, Chiva, Hell Dust, Horse, Negra, Smack, Thunder, dope, H, smack, junk, skag, brown, unga, whoonga, wonga, nyaope,
Legal status Asia In Hong Kong, diamorphine is regulated under Schedule 1 of Hong Kong's Chapter 134
Dangerous Drugs Ordinance. It is available by prescription. Anyone supplying diamorphine without a valid prescription can be fined $5,000,000 (
HKD) and imprisoned for life. The penalty for trafficking or manufacturing diamorphine is a $5,000,000 (HKD) fine and life imprisonment. Possession of diamorphine without a license from the Department of Health is illegal with a $1,000,000 (HKD) fine and seven years of jail time.
Europe In the Netherlands, diamorphine is a List I drug of the
Opium Law. It is available for prescription under tight regulation exclusively to long-term addicts for whom
methadone maintenance treatment has failed. It cannot be used to treat severe
pain or other illnesses. In the United Kingdom, diamorphine is available by prescription, though it is a restricted
Class A drug. According to the 50th edition of the
British National Formulary (BNF), diamorphine
hydrochloride may be used in the treatment of acute pain,
myocardial infarction, acute
pulmonary oedema, and
chronic pain. The treatment of chronic non-
malignant pain must be supervised by a specialist. The BNF notes that all opioid analgesics cause dependence and tolerance but that this is "no deterrent in the control of pain in terminal illness". When used in the
palliative care of cancer patients, diamorphine is often injected using a
syringe driver. In Switzerland, heroin is produced in injectable or tablet form under the brand name Diaphin by a private company under contract to the Swiss government. Swiss-produced heroin has been imported into Canada with government approval.
Australia , Sydney with a blue light to prevent intravenous drug use. 2026. In Australia, diamorphine is listed as a schedule 9 prohibited substance under the
Poisons Standard (October 2015). The state of
Western Australia, in its
Poisons Act 1964 (Reprint 6: amendments as at 10 September 2004), described a schedule 9 drug as: "Poisons that are drugs of abuse, the manufacture, possession, sale or use of which should be prohibited by law except for amounts which may be necessary for educational, experimental or research purposes conducted with the approval of the Governor."
North America In Canada, diamorphine is a controlled substance under Schedule I of the
Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA). Any person seeking or obtaining diamorphine without disclosing authorization 30 days before obtaining another prescription from a practitioner is guilty of an indictable offense and subject to imprisonment for a term not exceeding seven years. Possession of diamorphine for the purpose of trafficking is an indictable offense and subject to imprisonment for life. In the United States, diamorphine is a Schedule I drug according to the
Controlled Substances Act of 1970, making it illegal to possess without a DEA license. Possession of more than 100 grams of diamorphine or a mixture containing diamorphine is punishable with a minimum mandatory sentence of five years of imprisonment in a federal prison. In 2021, the US state of Oregon became the first state to decriminalize the use of heroin after voters passed
Ballot Measure 110 in 2020. This measure will allow people with small amounts to avoid arrest.
Turkey Turkey maintains strict laws against the use, possession or
trafficking of illegal drugs. If convicted under these offences, one could receive a heavy fine or a prison sentence of 4 to 24 years.
Misuse of prescription medication Misused prescription medicine, such as opioids, can lead to heroin use and dependence. The number of death from illegal opioid overdose follows the increasing number of death caused by prescription opioid overdoses. Prescription opioids are relatively easy to obtain. This may ultimately lead to heroin injection because heroin is cheaper than prescribed pills.
Licensed pharmaceutical manufacturers Heroin and its production and distribution are strictly regulated by government health authorities and subject to international drug control treaties. In countries where medical diamorphine (heroin) is legal, a small number of licensed pharmaceutical manufacturers are authorized to produce diamorphine from morphine, which is derived from legally cultivated opium poppy. All manufacturing and handling are conducted by these licensed companies under close government oversight, operating under stringent national and international regulations. Their activities are monitored by agencies such as the International Narcotics Control Board (INCB), and the entire supply chain—from opium cultivation to the final pharmaceutical product—is subject to quotas, licensing, and detailed reporting requirements to prevent diversion to illicit markets.
Distribution Diamorphine produced by licensed manufacturers is distributed to hospitals and clinics for medical use, primarily for pain management and, in some countries, for heroin-assisted treatment of opioid dependence. Distribution within the health care system is tightly controlled, and all use is documented and audited by health authorities. There is no commercial retail market for diamorphine; it is dispensed only by prescription and administered under medical supervision.
Illicit supply chain Production Diamorphine is produced from
acetylation of morphine derived from natural opium sources. One such method of heroin production involves isolation of the water-soluble components of raw opium, including morphine, in a strongly basic aqueous solution, followed by
recrystallization of the morphine base by addition of
ammonium chloride. The solid morphine base is then filtered out. The morphine base is then reacted with
acetic anhydride, which forms heroin. This highly impure brown heroin base may then undergo further purification steps, which produces a white-colored product; the final products have a different appearance depending on purity and have different names.
Trafficking Traffic is heavy worldwide, with the biggest producer being
Afghanistan. According to a U.N. sponsored survey, in 2004, Afghanistan accounted for production of 87 percent of the world's diamorphine. Afghan opium kills around 100,000 people annually. In 2003
The Independent reported: Opium production in that country has increased rapidly since, reaching an all-time high in 2006.
War in Afghanistan once again appeared as a facilitator of the trade. Some 3.3 million Afghans are involved in producing opium. , 1994–2016 (hectares) At present, opium poppies are mostly grown in Afghanistan (), and in Southeast Asia, especially in the region known as the
Golden Triangle straddling
Burma (),
Thailand,
Vietnam,
Laos () and
Yunnan province in China. There is also cultivation of opium poppies in Pakistan (), Mexico () and in
Colombia (). According to the
DEA, the majority of the heroin consumed in the United States comes from Mexico (50%) and Colombia (43–45%) via Mexican criminal cartels such as
Sinaloa Cartel. However, these statistics may be significantly unreliable, the DEA's 50/50 split between Colombia and Mexico is contradicted by the amount of hectares cultivated in each country and in 2014, the DEA claimed most of the heroin in the US came from Colombia. , the Sinaloa Cartel is the most active
drug cartel involved in smuggling illicit drugs such as heroin into the United States and trafficking them throughout the United States. According to the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police, 90% of the heroin seized in Canada (where the origin was known) came from Afghanistan. Pakistan is the destination and transit point for 40 percent of the opiates produced in Afghanistan, other destinations of Afghan opiates are Russia, Europe and Iran. A conviction for trafficking heroin carries the death penalty in most
Southeast Asian, some
East Asian and Middle Eastern countries (see
Use of death penalty worldwide for details), among which
Malaysia, Singapore and
Thailand are the strictest. The penalty applies even to citizens of countries where the penalty is not in place, sometimes causing controversy when foreign visitors are arrested for trafficking, for example, the arrest of
nine Australians in Bali, the
death sentence given to
Nola Blake in Thailand in 1987, or the hanging of an Australian citizen
Van Tuong Nguyen in Singapore.
Routes The Balkan route The
Balkan route remains the principal corridor for trafficking illegal opiates, primarily heroin, from Afghanistan to Western and Central Europe, with criminal networks-often highly organized and adaptable-leveraging both legal businesses and corruption to facilitate the smuggling, storage, and distribution of drugs. These groups generate enormous illicit profits, with the annual gross income from drug trafficking along the Balkan route estimated between $13.9 and $21.4 billion from 2019 to 2022, of which up to half is illegally moved across borders through complex financial flows that include shell companies, cryptocurrencies, and informal systems like
hawala. The majority of these profits, around 90 percent, come from opiates, and the scale of this income rivals or exceeds the GDP of several countries along the route. The movement of these illicit funds not only sustains and expands drug trafficking operations but also undermines economic stability and governance in affected countries, making the Balkan route a persistent and multifaceted challenge for law enforcement and policymakers in the region.
Trafficking history The origins of the present international illegal heroin trade can be traced back to laws passed in many countries in the early 1900s that closely regulated the production and sale of opium and its derivatives including heroin. At first, heroin flowed from countries where it was still legal into countries where it was no longer legal. By the mid-1920s, heroin production had been made illegal in many parts of the world. An illegal trade developed at that time between heroin labs in China (mostly in Shanghai and Tianjin) and other nations. The weakness of the government in China and conditions of civil war enabled heroin production to take root there. Chinese
triad gangs eventually came to play a major role in the illicit heroin trade. The
French Connection route started in the 1930s. Heroin trafficking was virtually eliminated in the US during
World War II because of temporary trade disruptions caused by the war. Japan's war with China had cut the normal distribution routes for heroin and the war had generally disrupted the movement of opium. After World War II,
the Mafia took advantage of the weakness of the postwar Italian government and set up heroin labs in Sicily which was located along the historic route opium took westward into Europe and the United States. Large-scale international heroin production effectively ended in China with the victory of the communists in the civil war in the late 1940s. The elimination of Chinese production happened at the same time that Sicily's role in the trade developed. Although it remained legal in some countries until after World War II, health risks, addiction, and widespread recreational use led most western countries to declare heroin a controlled substance by the latter half of the 20th century. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the
CIA supported anti-Communist Chinese Nationalists settled near the
Sino-Burmese border and
Hmong tribesmen in
Laos. This helped the development of the
Golden Triangle opium production region, which supplied about one-third of heroin consumed in the US after the 1973 American withdrawal from Vietnam. In 1999, Burma, the heartland of the Golden Triangle, was the second-largest producer of heroin, after
Afghanistan. The Soviet-Afghan war led to increased production in the Pakistani-Afghan border regions, as US-backed
mujaheddin militants raised money for arms from selling opium, contributing heavily to the modern
Golden Crescent creation. By 1980, 60 percent of the heroin sold in the US originated in Afghanistan. Based on heroin production statistics compiled by the
United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, in 2006, Bagcho's activities accounted for approximately 20 percent of the world's total production for that year. The
United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime claims in its 2008 World Drug Report that typical US retail prices are US$172 per gram.
Urban legends Bluetoothing In early 2017, sensationalist media reports claimed that ‘nyaope’ users shared the drug-induced high through small
blood transfusions, a practice supposedly called "bluetoothing" (from the
Bluetooth wireless technology). The claim was untrue: the practice is not known on the street and physiologically could not achieve the claimed effect.
Claims that 'whoonga' or 'nyaope' is made from anti-retrovirals, rat poison, etc. Sensationalist media reports have often claimed that ‘whoonga’ or ‘nyaope’ is a uniquely South African drug containing ingredients such as rat poison, anti-retroviral medication, and materials gleaned from the cathode tubes in stolen flat screen televisions. However scientific laboratory studies have shown these claims to be urban legends, and that 'whoonga' and 'nyapoe' are in fact simply heroin and do not contain ARV medication, rat poison, or chemicals from flat screen televisions. According to researcher Jesse Copelyn it "has been shown "that media accounts that frame nyaope as a new and exotic drug are misleading" and "have obscured the fact that South Africa simply has a major heroin crisis". ==Research==