Pubdate: Sun, 11 Aug 2002 Source: Seattle Times (WA) Copyright: 2002 The Seattle Times Company Contact: http://www.seattletimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/409 Author: Neil MacFarquhar, The New York Times DRUG ADDICTION GROWING IN KUWAIT KUWAIT CITY - The corpses started appearing about every other day in December. Most were discovered in hospital parking lots, but a few were tossed into trash bins or abandoned in parked cars. All were men. This moneyed enclave is struggling to contain a surge in drug addiction that officials are loath to call an epidemic but acknowledge is spinning out of control. Kuwait has a per capita income of about $20,000, and drug-smuggling networks know it is a ready market. "Before ... when we arrested someone for smuggling 100 or 200 kilos of hashish, that was something huge," said Brig. Gen. Abdel Hamid al- Awadi, director-general of the Criminal Investigation Department in the Ministry of the Interior. "Now that is nothing." In 2000, for example, new drug controls, including coastal patrols, confiscated 7,700 pounds of hashish. A year later, it was 10,362 pounds of hashish. There are also heroin, cocaine, marijuana, opium and prescription pills. Statistics released during a recent seminar at Amiri Hospital suggested that Kuwait had 20,000 addicts, 1 percent of the population. Periodic bad batches cause the sudden spikes in deaths, which are running at about 75 a year. In explanation, health and law-enforcement officials point to several factors. The Iraqi invasion a decade ago left residents traumatized and more prone to seek solace in drugs, they say. The population of 2 million is getting younger, and bored, affluent youths who find little entertainment in the religiously conservative emirate take drugs to pass the time. The Islamic ban on alcohol augments drugs' allure. "They have money and nothing to do, so they seek to occupy their time with drugs," said Tariq al-Jassar, manager of the state-run Amiri Hospital. "Here in Kuwait there is nothing to do; it's boring all the time," said Faisal, 25, a recovering addict and son of an army general. "But with drugs I had fun. I was living for the action - going around, buying, selling." Dealers readily find couriers among the thousands of laborers entering Kuwait. The penalty is death, but with thousands of such cases in recent years, judges have condemned only about five men to death, officials said. Most treatment is channeled through the government-run Psychiatric Hospital, which makes many addicts reluctant to seek help. "Some don't think it is a good idea to be treated at a mental-health center, so they try to avoid it," Jassar said. "Once they go there they have the association of being mentally ill, which only adds to the problem." Still, the center, with 130 beds, is overburdened. Most patients are sent there by the courts. Patients say they are more likely to get off drugs in the hospital than in jail, where drugs are available. "You can still get drugs inside jail if you bribe the guards enough," said Ahmed al-Muzayan, 28, a former trainer for the National Guard. He said everyone around him in the military was using drugs. A 200-bed treatment center is being planned, but those who have faced addiction say much more should be done. "There are no rehab clinics; we are still really backward," said Muhammad Abdulla al-Shehab, spokesman for Narcotics Anonymous in Kuwait. "They still think it is shameful, criminal," he said, referring to the Kuwaiti government, "and they should make people stop through force." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh