Pubdate: Sun, 23 Apr 2000 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2000 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: 435 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60611-4066 Website: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Forum: http://www.chicagotribune.com/interact/boards/ Author: Colin McMahon DRUG CENTER TAKING BACK RUSSIA STREETS City Without Drugs Treats Addicts With A Controversial Program Of Discipline While Targeting Dealers With A Mix Of Grass-Roots Monitoring And Vigilantism. YEKATERINBURG, Russia -- The Fund for a City Without Drugs makes no secret of its methods, but the scene at the group's drug-rehabilitation center still comes as a shock. Young men lie on the springs of metal cots, their jean jackets serving as both sheets and mattresses. Their wrists are handcuffed to the beds. Their eyes are sunken, their faces pallid, their voices flat. They are prisoners, of both heroin and of the men who swear to help them. An explosion in drug use is battering Russia. It fuels not only crime and poverty, but the spread of AIDS as well. The police-state controls of the Soviet-era have collapsed. Corruption and laxity among border guards, police and prosecutors make narcotics enforcement erratic at best. People are fed up. And in the hard-hit Ural Mountains city of Yekaterinburg, they are pushing aside police and doctors in search of a solution. A trio of local businessmen with controversial links to suspected organized crime groups have formed City Without Drugs to attack the narcotics trade on both ends. They treat users with a homemade program that shuns medicine in favor of discipline. They target dealers with a mix of grass-roots monitoring and hands-on vigilantism. With a typical lack of modesty, the fund's founders say their approach should serve as a model not only for Russia but for the West too. Police and government officials have visited Yekaterinburg from other Russian regions to take notes on the program. Last week, City Without Drugs welcomed an observer from Ukraine. Should the fund's influence grow beyond Yekaterinburg, its tactics and its ties to alleged mob figures could present President-elect Vladimir Putin with a dilemma. Putin may share the group's zeal for order. But he wants that order imposed by the state, and he has talked often about breaking up organized crime. "My personal opinion is that dealers should be shot," said Andrei Kabanov, a former heroin addict and co-founder of City Without Drugs. "But being a loyal citizen, without a law adopted by our government, we can't do this." With their hands so tied, Kabanov and his supporters have found other ways to disrupt the drug trade. They have set up a pager service to field tips from concerned residents--70,000 calls since it began last year. They might visit a suspected drug dealer at his home or confront him on the street. "We don't have the right to arrest people," said Igor Varov, the fund's president. "But everybody has his own right as a citizen. If someone sells heroin to my son, he won't stay alive. This is my right as a father." Some Yekaterinburg dealers have wound up brutally beaten. Some have seen their homes set on fire. In one celebrated show last fall, a force of about 500 beefy men descended on the drug-ravaged neighborhood of Gypsy Village. Some of the men emerged from the Mercedes-Benzes and other luxury cars to pay house calls on suspected dealers. Others stood around for hours, watching people come and go, sending out their message. Drug sales in the area declined. "Well, look, there goes a narco," said Varov, wheeling his Mercedes through the back alleys of a neighborhood he said is rife with drug sales. "There. Another one. And another." Most of the people coming and going from the apartment buildings fit Varov's bill, including, possibly, the cobbler whose tiny workshop opens out onto a sidewalk. It could be good cover for drug sales. "What are you doing here?" Varov asked, powering down a car window to talk to a disheveled fellow who looked about 45 but was probably much younger. The man replied meekly, something about going to the store. "Better that you get out of here before I kill you," said Varov. He raised the window and drove off. Last month, Sverdlovsk Gov. Eduard Rossel appointed Varov chief of a regional commission that includes high-ranking officials from several law-enforcement agencies. The idea, Varov said, is to collect information on drug trafficking and better target and coordinate enforcement. Yekaterinburg police are not represented on the panel. Varov and his colleagues accuse them of protecting the traffickers and even dealing drugs themselves. The methods of City Without Drugs are not the only concern. When created last year, the fund received significant support from the Uralmash Public and Political Union, widely regarded as the political arm of one of Russia's most powerful organized crime gangs. City Without Drugs, some critics alleged, was helping Uralmash consolidate its own grip on the lucrative heroin market by putting competing dealers out of business. Others contended that City Without Drugs was merely a political front, a public-relations campaign to burnish the thuggish image of a Uralmash candidate for parliament. If so, the effort failed. Uralmash's Alexander Khabarov lost the race for parliament to his main and bitter rival, the chief of the local police. "People didn't vote for Khabarov because they are afraid of him," said a Yekaterinburg political observer. "It's that simple." Now, contrary to many predictions, City Without Drugs is continuing its campaign. Varov said Uralmash's role has fallen off. And he brushed off allegations about Uralmash's criminal history. "I believe as Rossel believes," Varov said, referring to the Sverdlovsk governor. "If you think someone is a criminal, then prosecute him. If you cannot prosecute him, that means he is not a criminal." Varov and his partners hope to raise hundreds of thousands of dollars for a research and treatment facility in Yekaterinburg. Their current rehab center, now home to 64 young men, is near capacity. The waiting list, already at more than 300 names, is growing. Alexander, a 23-year-old factory worker, wants to be on that list. He started taking drugs as a conscript during the first war in Chechnya in 1996. By the time he was released from the army, he was a heroin addict. The last two years have been a struggle to hold down a job and support a family and a habit that eats up his measly salary. Heroin is abundant in Yekaterinburg and, at less than $4 a fix, relatively cheap. The industrial city, famous as the place where the Bolsheviks murdered the last Russian czar, is a transit point for drug traffickers working between Central Asia and Europe. Addicts interviewed at clinics in the city said heroin is readily available even in small towns. Echoing Kabanov and his colleagues, the addicts and even some social workers dismissed the influence of the kind of risk factors associated with American drug usage--broken homes, for example, or poverty. They said drug use usually starts and takes hold because young people are curious and because heroin has a cool image among many Russian teenagers. Alexander views City Without Drugs with mixed feelings. He is worried by the center's reputation for toughness. But his mother is desperate, and Alexander says he wants to care for his wife and 2-year-old child. "I don't know what to do," said Alexander's mother, fighting back tears during a visit at a state-run detox clinic where Alexander is undergoing his fourth round of treatment. "This is not working." So, too, says Kabanov, a former heroin addict who models the fund's rehab program after his own cold turkey experience. He says the medical approach to addiction is doomed to fail and that doctors are criticizing him merely to protect their turf. "The whole world considers drug addiction a disease," said Kabanov, who was treated eight times at a Moscow clinic before finally beating his addiction on his own. "A disease assumes compassion, pity. Drug addicts do not deserve compassion because it is not a disease. Many of the young men at the fund's rehab center in a wooded area on the outskirts of Yekaterinburg were put there by their parents. Most had tried treatment before, some several times, but eventually all ended up back on the needle. The most recent arrivals to the center are handcuffed to their beds. They are fed only bread and water during their two or three weeks of withdrawal. They are allowed to get up three times a day to go to the bathroom. Those who have completed the detox program offer encouragement to the new arrivals. "We tell them there is no other way out," said Andrei Vershinin, 25, who was among the initial group of six who came to the clinic when it opened last December. The young men also keep each other in line. They look up to Varov, calling him by a Russian term of endearment much like "Daddy." They accept the discipline he imposes. "They are a family, after all," Kabanov said. "If someone does something wrong, he is punished in a fatherly way. You can't do it without punishment, because a drug addict is a scoundrel. He has to develop a reflex "Pain once. Pain twice. Then he understands. Nothing horrible." Varov said he expects most of the addicts to stay in the center for about a year. If they want to stay longer, they can. Those like Vershinin, who says he has lost all craving for heroin, are allowed to walk the woods or visit a nearby lake. But they are barred from, say, going into central Yekaterinburg on their own. "What do they need there?" asked Varov. "They have all they need here. All that is there is heroin." Some young men have fled. But Varov and his people tracked them down and brought them back. Others have left and returned on their own accord. "There is one still missing," Varov said. "But we will find him. And we will haul him back." The center is only 7 months old, so Kabanov may be too quick with his boasts of unprecedented results. Doctors and psychiatrists who treat addicts in Yekaterinburg warn that relapses are common. Kabanov's charges have yet to live on their own Varov and Kabanov vow to follow their boys for as long as it takes to keep them clean. And few have any doubts that any missteps would mean hell to pay. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake