Convention for Limiting the Manufacture and Regulating the Distribution of Narcotic Drugs
The Convention for Limiting the Manufacture and Regulating the Distribution of Narcotic Drugs was a drug control treaty promulgated in Geneva on 13 July 1931 that entered into force on 9 July 1933.
History
The conference was held in Geneva on or about 27 May 1931.After World War II, the 1931 convention's scope was broadened considerably by the 1948 Protocol Bringing under International Control Drugs outside the Scope of the Convention of 13 July 1931 for Limiting the Manufacture and Regulating the Distribution of Narcotic Drugs. In 1968, the convention was superseded by the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, as it entered into force.
Overview
Schedules
It established two groups of drugs.Group I consisted of:
- Sub-group, which consisted of:
- *Morphine and its salts, including its ester salts like morphine diacetate and preparations made directly from raw or medicinal opium and containing more than 20 percent of morphine;
- *Cocaine and its salts, including preparations made direct from the coca leaf and containing more than 0.1 percent of cocaine, all the esters of ecgonine and their salts;
- *Dihydrohydrooxycodeinone, dihydrocodeinone, dihydromorphinone, acetyldihydrocodeinone or acetyldemethylodihydrothebaine ; dihydromorphine, their esters and the salts of any of these substances and of their esters, morphine-N-oxide, also the morphine-N-oxide derivatives, and the other pentavalent nitrogen morphine derivatives.
- Sub-group, which consisted of:
- *Ecgonine, thebaine and their salts, benzylmorphine and the other ethers of morphine and their salts, except methylmorphine, ethylmorphine and their salts.
- Methylmorphine, ethylmorphine and their salts.
Drug Supervisory Body
The Drug Supervisory Body was established under the 1931 Convention to compile estimates of the amount of drugs to be consumed, manufactured, converted, exported, imported, or used by each country.One member of the Body was nominated by the Office international d'hygiène publique.
The Body should not be confused with the Permanent Central Opium Board established under the Second International Opium Convention of 1925, although both the Body and the Board were merged onto the International Narcotics Control Board when the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs entered into force in 1968.