Pubdate: Mon, 26 Jun 2000 Source: DAWN (Pakistan) Copyright: 2000 The DAWN Group of Newspapers Contact: http://dawn.com BATTLE AGAINST DRUGS On the first International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking of the new century, Pakistan is eliciting a mixed response to its fight against narcotics. There is good reason for this. While Pakistan has won international plaudits for curtailing opium production at home, the number of drug abusers in the country is rising by an alarming seven per cent a year. There are approximately five million drug abusers - 1.5 million of whom are heroin addicts - in the country and between 25 to 30 million people whose lives are adversely affected by the addiction of their relatives. Peer pressure at school, societal taboos, economic frustrations and lack of healthy recreational outlets are among the major reasons why people, especially the youth, are succumbing to the lure of addictive drugs. No doubt Pakistan has strong anti-drug policies and legislation in place. However, it appears to be losing its battle against narcotics on at least two fronts. First, the law enforcement agencies have failed to check trafficking from Afghanistan that is the world's second largest producer of opium. Second, government attempts to create awareness about substance abuse have largely been shoddy and unsuccessful. Poppy cultivation in Afghanistan has the Taliban government's tacit support. More or less a pariah state in the eyes of the world community, Afghanistan's desperate poverty has seen the cultivation of the poppy as a major cash crop and narcotics production as perhaps the largest source of income for the country. This is an area where other countries, especially those bordering Afghanistan, including Pakistan and Iran, must engage the Taliban in serious negotiations in a bid to stop drug production and cross-border smuggling. Illegal drugs from Afghanistan pass through Iran and Pakistan on their way to Turkey and western markets. Unless Afghan poppy growers are provided with similar incentives that led the majority of Pakistan's poppy farmers to abandon the cultivation of the crop, it is difficult to expect narcotics production in Afghanistan to register an appreciable decrease. Currently, in Pakistan, drugs that enter the country are in large quantities, but according to one estimate, barely 20 per cent of the smuggled amount is intercepted. This has led to wide distribution of different drugs in the country. The second aspect of the problem that needs urgent government attention is the lack of public awareness of the hazards of substance abuse. Recently, the Punjab Anti-Narcotics Force announced the formation of a task force consisting of representatives of the excise, health and education departments with a view to disseminating information about the dangers of drugs. This is a wise step that should be emulated by other provinces. The lethal effects of drug abuse have hardly been subjects of public debate, and until now, families of narcotics consumers have shied away from acknowledging the addiction in their midst. Shunned by society, drug abusers have had practically no institution to turn to for help. There are few detoxification centres, and even fewer rehabilitation homes where they could be helped by qualified staff to kick their habit and try to transform themselves into useful members of society. The authorities must remember that as long as there is a demand for narcotics in the country, no amount of vigilance or law enforcement is likely to see a decrease in the number of substance abusers. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson