Pubdate: Thu, 29 Aug 2002 Source: Guardian Weekly, The (UK) Copyright: Guardian Publications 2002 Contact: http://www.guardianunlimited.co.uk/GWeekly/front/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/633 Author: Andrew Osborn, in Oslo Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) EXPENSIVE OSLO - CITY OF THE CHEAP FIX Norwegian Capital Tops Europe's Overdose Deaths League Its standard of living was officially recognised this month as the best money can buy, but Norway has a darker, less publicised claim to fame: Oslo has become Europe's drug overdose capital and is awash with heroin. The city is infamously expensive. A pint of beer will set you back $7.50, a packet of cigarettes $8.50. Heroin, however, is relatively cheap - one tenth of a gram costs about the same as 20 Marlboro. The drug's relative affordability has encouraged thousands of Norwegians to develop a habit, with fatal consequences. Every fifth autopsy carried out by the city coroner now reaches the same depressing conclusion: death by drug overdose. Oslo has the worst rate of drug-related deaths of 42 European cities, according to a report by the Council of Europe's Pompidou Group, set up in 1971 to study drug abuse and trafficking. Last year 338 Norwegians died from drug overdoses, 114 of them in Oslo, compared with 75 in 1990. The Norwegian Institute for Alcohol and Drug Research estimates that the number of intravenous users has doubled in the past decade to 14,000. These statistics contrast sharply with the picture painted by the United Nations human development report this month, which for the second year running concluded that life expectancy, education and healthcare in Norway were better than anywhere else. One explanation for the high death rate is the injection culture. "Contrary to many other countries Norwegian drug addicts inject themselves with heroin rather than smoke it," says Ketil Bentzen, who is deputy director general of the ministry of social affairs. "Nor do they take it on its own. They mix it with pills such as Rohypnol and alcohol, and that is deadly," he adds. Even though the possession, use and trafficking of drugs are illegal and punishable by a maximum prison term of 21 years, the drug scene in Oslo is startlingly open. A hotdog kiosk near to Oslo's central station is the focal point for addicts and pushers. An estimated 500 to 600 people visit it every day. The addicts, whose emaciated faces poke out from hooded tops, look like the tortured Norwegians depicted by Edvard Munch in his paintings. "It's like something out of Victor Hugo's Les Miserables," says Trym Skarra, a city council social worker. Mr Bentzen is philosophical about the future. "It's not difficult to detox an addict," he says. "The real challenge is to find something with which to replace their addiction, and the government is unable to distribute the meaning of life." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom