Pubdate: Mon, 15 Oct 2001 Source: Charlotte Observer (NC) Copyright: 2001 The Charlotte Observer Contact: http://www.charlotte.com/observer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/78 Author: Juan O. Tamayo, Knight Ridder Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) AFGHAN WAR MEANS CHEAP HEROIN Pakistan Addicts Don't Bother Hiding, Live By Begging For Support PESHAWAR, Pakistan -- These are easier times for Pakistan's estimated 300,000 heroin users, with prices tumbling from $1.20 a gram to 30 U.S. cents after the Taliban government in Afghanistan, the world's largest grower of opium poppies, lifted all restrictions on the industry in the face of U.S. attacks. U.S. and U.N. narcotics officials believe the Taliban lifted their year-old ban against growing opium poppies, the starting point for heroin, so they could tax the industry and replenish their war coffers. The ban had been declared on religious grounds. Oddly, for an officially Islamic nation that bans alcohol except for foreigners, heroin, opium or hashish use here has seldom been attacked by the leading Islamic clerics, said a U.N. counter-narcotics official who asked to remain anonymous. "Heroin addiction is not perceived as an important moral, religious or social problem in Pakistan," the official said. "I guess the Koran does not speak about heroin, and narcotics use was traditional among the tribes of the region, so no one pays it any mind." Heroin addiction is a particularly large problem in Peshawar, in the virtually lawless tribal areas near the Afghanistan border, the world's largest heroin market. There are an estimated 40,000 heroin addicts in Peshawar, where smugglers come to sell their sticky brown opium. Snorting in the open Abdullah, an addict in Peshawar, comes daily to the tribal areas where Afghan heroin, opium and hashish are sold almost openly. News of the war between America and Afghanistan has not quite penetrated the heroin fog that clouds Abdullah's brain. "Somebody said something about it, but it's not my problem," the slightly built 30-year-old Afghan refugee mumbled as he huddled with several other addicts. His biggest challenge is begging or stealing 30 cents for the gram he needs each day. Their hair spiked with dirt, their shirts and pants filthy, shoes long ago traded for another hit, Abdullah and the other men made no attempt to hide as they heated the white powder on bits of tin paper and inhaled the fumes through metal tubes. "They are just like dead people," said Dr. Fadi Mouhammed, head of the eight-bed Drug Treatment Center at the Lady Dearing Hospital. The men (women addicts are extremely rare) are commonly known here as "powdri" - the powder users. In all of Peshawar, there are less than 300 beds for heroin addiction treatment, said Mohammed. Hospitals charge $8 a month per person - a stiff price in a country where a construction worker is lucky to make 50 U.S. cents a day. So the addicts beg and steal, sleeping in dark, urine-smelling hallways in Peshawar's Old City or in the tribal areas along the border, shooing away water buffaloes to look for scraps of bread in garbage dumps. "I do not tell a lie, sir, I live by just begging," said a tall, English-speaking addict whose head nodded violently as he identified himself as "Jamial, son of Mishazada of Waziristan, a high school graduate and 35 years old." He had been a truck driver, almost a middle-class profession in Pakistan. But for the past 12 years he has been a regular heroin snorter, working odd jobs when he can, begging when he can't. 'Get us into a hospital' Three blocks from where Abdullah and Jamial snort, anyone who can get past the police checkpoint and the sign that says "No Foreigners Allowed Beyond This Point" can walk into a shop and buy a gram of opium for 15 U.S. cents or an AK-47 assault rifle for as little as $30. The addicts in Abdullah and Jamial's group hang around the border because it's a good place to hit up the foreigners who stop there, and just a short walk to their suppliers. But they would rather be somewhere else. "Please, can you get us into a hospital?" said Jamial. "We just lost another man this morning." "We buried him over there," Shah said, pointing to a garbage dump. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl