President Donald Trump's recent threats to execute drug dealers are reportedly materializing in his final plan to combat the opioid addiction epidemic that has killed tens of thousands of people annually in recent years.

According to Politico, the proposal—expected to be unveiled next week when the president visits New Hampshire, one of the hardest-hit states—will call for capital punishment for dealers and traffickers in "certain cases where opioid, including Fentanyl-related, drug dealing and trafficking are directly responsible for death."

The notion of state-sanctioned executions of drug dealers has alarmed public health experts and criminal justice reform advocates in recent days, as Trump has expressed admiration for Filipino President Rodrigo Duterte's deadly war on drugs and similar measures by other leaders.

Trump's long-awaited plan to 'solve' the opioid overdose crisis should be out next week. It's centered around ramping up prosecutions & incarceration, and even calls for the death penalty for certain sales. This is a spectacular failure of leadership. https://t.co/UADwX8y76T — Drug Policy Alliance (@DrugPolicyOrg) March 15, 2018

Trump is proposing the DEATH PENALTY for drug dealers. NO surprise, given Trump’s genuflection for despots like Duterte, who executes people w/o a trial‼️



In the US, Trump’s proposal likely is UNCONSTITUTIONAL”cruel and unusual punishment”.https://t.co/Vh6BpOjWrx — Dr. Dena Grayson (@DrDenaGrayson) March 15, 2018

Human rights groups have condemned Duterte's drug war as it has led to thousands of deaths in poor communities, many at the hands of the Philippine National Police.

A senior administration official told Axios last week that the president "often jokes about killing drug dealers....He'll say, 'You know the Chinese and Filipinos don't have a drug problem. They just kill them.'" Trump also has privately expressed admiration for Singapore's policy of putting to death people who sell, administer, transport, or distribute certain quantities of drugs.

"Think of it, you kill one person, you get the death penalty in many states," Trump told a crowd in Pennsylvania last weekend. "You kill 5,000 people with drugs because you're smuggling them in and you're making a lot of money and people are dying, and they don't even put you in jail. They don't do anything...and then you wonder why we have a problem."

The expected proposal and Trump's recent rhetoric have led many to argue that pushing for the executions of drug dealers would result in targeting low-income and black communities.

I’m still collecting my thoughts about this shit. I’ll just reiterate that the state has no business killing people, and that the death penalty is a cornerstone of systemic racism. @POTUS isn’t talking about killing the Sacklers, or Big Pharma executives. https://t.co/oWH2oVT2hN — Jamil Smith (@JamilSmith) March 11, 2018

When black Americans are 3.73 times more likely than whites to be arrested for #marijuana (despite similar usage rates) the death penalty @realDonaldTrump wants for drug dealers amounts to thinly disguised racial cleansing. — Scott Erickson (@xkot) March 15, 2018

"I wish that he had the same tenacity in attacking the practices of multi-national pharmaceutical companies that have pushed prescription opioids, which have led to the vast majority of abuse cases," Rep. Jared Polis (D-Colo.) told Rolling Stone on Thursday.