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Hong Kong set to ban newly emerging drug known as ‘space oil’ next year

Space oil, which has quickly become third-most popular drug among young users, contains anaesthetic etomidate and can be mixed with cannabis and ketamine

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Evidence seized by police last week when officers arrested six teenagers on suspicion of selling or possessing space oil disguised as e-cigarette capsules. Photo: Hong Kong Police Force

Hong Kong is set to ban a newly emerging drug known as “space oil” next year by adding it to the existing narcotics law, the security minister has said.

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The drug, usually packaged as e-cigarette capsules, contained the anaesthetic etomidate, which could cause mental and physical harm, Secretary for Security Chris Tang Ping-keung said on Wednesday, vowing to tackle the rising prevalence of space oil by updating the Dangerous Drugs Ordinance.

Etomidate would be added to the list of banned substances in the first half of next year, he added.

Once the drug is listed, anyone possessing, smoking, inhaling, injecting or otherwise ingesting space oil containing etomidate will face up to seven years’ imprisonment and a HK$1 million (US$128,650) fine, Tang noted. Trafficking in the substance could result in life imprisonment and a fine of HK$5 million, he added.

Tang said frontline anti-drug workers noticed the emergence of space oil last year after the Covid-19 pandemic subsided, with some young people vaping it.

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According to government figures, 69 people have been arrested for possession or sale of the drug so far this year, up from nine cases in 2023. Six teenagers were arrested last week by Kwai Tsing district police on suspicion of selling or possessing space oil disguised as e-cigarette capsules.

The Action Committee Against Narcotics reported last month that space oil had become the third-most popular drug among young users, after cannabis and cocaine, in the first half of the year.

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