Pubdate: Tue, 29 Feb 2000 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2000 Houston Chronicle Contact: Viewpoints Editor, P.O. Box 4260 Houston, Texas 77210-4260 Fax: (713) 220-3575 Website: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Author: Michael Riley, Special to the Chronicle DRUG PROBLEMS FLOW BACK SOUTH OF THE BORDER Mexico Reports Increase In Cocaine Addiction Cases MEXICO CITY - The 39-year-old mother of three said there was no way to escape the drug dealers who invaded her working-class neighborhood. "On both sides of our house they sell cocaine," said Elena, who asked not to be otherwise identified. "Many don't let their children go outside, but you can't lock them in forever." As a result, her 19-year-old son became addicted to what she calls "little rocks" - crack cocaine. Now, once a week, she takes her son to a drug-treatment center. Like many in this city of 20 million, the clinic is filled with people seeking help for their addictions, mostly to cocaine, according to counselors and medical personnel. "Three years ago, it was hard to find a patient here using cocaine," said Marta Gutierrez, director of a treatment center in Ixtapalapa, a poor neighborhood on Mexico City's south side. "Now it is hard to find a patient who is not using it." As the Clinton administration nears a Wednesday deadline to decide which countries to certify as drug-war allies, it is becoming increasingly apparent that what has long been considered an American problem is now becoming a challenge for a growing number of Mexican families. Government reports and accounts by drug counselors and medical personnel suggest that use of illegal narcotics is on the rise in Mexico and that cocaine has become the No. 1 drug. A Mexican Health Department survey published last year concluded that illegal drug use among the population increased 56 percent in the previous five years, although the number of users is far lower than in the United States. Another study by the nongovernmental Center for Juvenile Integration reported that the percentage of its young patients using cocaine had jumped from 10 percent in 1990 to 60 percent in 1998. Jesus Cabrera, who directs the center, says cocaine has become the drug addiction most commonly treated at his 73 rehabilitation centers throughout Mexico. In a tour through Latin America last year, U.S. drug czar Barry McCaffrey told the region's leaders that narcotics consumption was no longer just a U.S. problem. Countries such as Mexico cannot be bases for America's drug suppliers without also getting burned, he said. With more children and young adults showing up at drug treatment centers, Mexicans are viewing the drug war in a new light, analysts say. "Three or four years ago, kids weren't being affected," says Jose Garcia, a drug-war expert at New Mexico State University. "Mexicans weren't seeing this stuff on the street, or seeing people drugged-up all over the place. "Ironically," he says, "that may ultimately be the key to undoing the cartels themselves, because of the public backlash." Ixtapalapa is often used as a testing ground for government programs on domestic violence or teen-age pregnancy because officials believe that the area usually is the first to see the city's social trends. But Ixtapalapa points to a desperate future for the drug war. The number of patients entering the neighborhood drug treatment center has nearly tripled in the last year, and workers at the clinic say the streets are dominated by gangs that are selling the drug to schoolchildren as well as adults. "The gangs are hanging out more around schools," said Gutierrez, the treatment center's director. "Now they are threatening children to get them to sell drugs inside the schools, where the police don't go." Cocaine is relatively cheap and plentiful in Mexico City, officials and drug counselors say. A gram of the drug costs about $20 on the streets, compared to a reported range of $80 to $150 a gram in the United States. Some analysts say that the United States may have inadvertently contributed to the upsurge in drug use here by pushing Mexico to toe the line in the fight against drugs. "Some people talk about an informal agreement between the cartels and the Mexican government. The government wouldn't come down too hard on the traffickers, and they in turn wouldn't put drugs on the streets in Mexico," says Sigrid Arzt, a drug-trade researcher at the University of Miami. But U.S. pressure to crack down on the cartels may have led Mexican authorities to violate that understanding, Arzt says, and the cartels began selling on the streets. Although Mexico is expected to win certification easily as a reliable drug-war partner this year, Washington's annual ritual and its sometimes raucous debate in Congress still rankle many here. They view it as yet another example of the United States' insensitivity and heavy-handedness toward its southern neighbor. The countries not certified by the administration, or by Congress during its review, face economic sanctions and the loss of U.S. aid, although the penalties can be waived. Critics of Mexico's drug strategies say its anti-narcotics budget focuses on big operations against the cartels to the detriment of the neighborhoods. The Mexican government, they say, spent $170 million last year on drug interdiction, much of it to acquire new ships, helicopters and satellite tracking technology -- all of little use in fighting street drugs. "All the money is going into interception, seizures and arresting the big fish in the cartels, but that is a response to American pressure," Arzt says. "The Americans couldn't care less what is happening on Mexico's streets." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D