Pubdate: Mon, 8 Apr 2002 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 2002 Hearst Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388 Author: Chip Johnson ELDERLY FEED OPIUM HABIT THROUGH MAIL Many Immigrants Addicted To Drug Every once in a while, like a gentle tap on the shoulder, Laotian war refugee Chiem Saetern gets a little reminder of the old days. It's always a bit of a surprise for the white-whiskered Saetern, now 72, but every so often he catches the unmistakable scent of opium in the air. Most recently, the pungent aroma hit the North Richmond man as he stepped into a friend's car. "I've tried to encourage (friends) to stop, and some say they are trying to quit, but I can't be sure," said Saetern, whose son, Kao Saetern, 47, interpreted for him. "They believe if they stop the opium, they will die," he said. The physical withdrawal from opium is identical to that for heroin, a more popular opium derivative. The condition can last five days or more. And although quitting won't kill, it can make an addict feel next to dead for a while. Saetern kicked the addiction during a two-year stint in a refugee camp in Thailand, but thousands of his Hmong, Mien and Laotian contemporaries now living in Northern and Central California are not as fortunate. More than 30 years after the first wave of Southeast Asian immigrants arrived in America, opium use is still strictly a mom-and-pop operation. There is ample anecdotal evidence to suggest that most of the immigrants still using opium are elderly. Many were born in the Golden Crescent, a swath of agricultural highlands stretching from Burma to Laos where most of the world's opium poppies are grown. Some, like Saetern, were opium farmers who cultivated the cash crop and used it regularly. In recent years, the adult children of elderly Southeast Asian addicts have intervened and enrolled them in methadone clinics or drug rehabilitation programs to help them break their drug habits. "We have adult children bringing their uncles, grandfathers and mothers in here all the time," said Alicia Hererra, director of the detox unit at The Effort, a Sacramento drug rehabilitation program. "They bring their (opium) pipes in and surrender them when they come in the door," she said. The senior citizen addicts, who come from urban and rural areas, make up about 20 percent of the patients admitted to the 10-day detoxification program, Hererra added. Opium is undeniably a part of Southeast Asian culture, and immigrants use it as a pain reliever and cure-all, said Tseng Saecho, a counselor with Asian Mental Health Services in Oakland. "It's something you would offer a friend at your home," said Saecho. "Just like a drink," he added. Saecho's late father was a regular user in Laos, as were "pretty much all my ancestors," he said. These days, Saecho has about 10 clients, all elderly, who receive treatment at a methadone clinic in North Oakland. One of the biggest hurdles he must overcome initially is the stigma attached to looking for intervention from outside the closed community, he said. "There is a shame attached to seeking help," said Saecho. "It's considered a weakness, and you're considered helpless. That's a big part of it," he added. Opium use among elderly southeast Asian immigrants is widespread, with most using the drug in their own homes as a cure-all for physical and emotional pain. And while their younger relatives may purchase and, in rare cases, distribute the drug, this is one drug problem that largely eludes the radar screen of most police departments. But that is hardly the case for U.S. Customs Service agents at the Oakland mail facility, which processes more mail from Asia than any postal facility in the nation. In the early 1980s, there was so much opium being smuggled through the mail that customs officers began referring to it as the Opium Mail Facility, said Linda Burnett, a postal supervisor at an airmail plant in Daly City. In a 10-day period in June and July 1999, according to statistics compiled by the National Drug Intelligence Center, more than 800 pounds of opium was seized at the Oakland mail facility. But these days, it is more common to seize the drug in airmail parcels most often shipped from Laos and Thailand in small parcels weighing no more than two pounds, Burnett said. Varying amounts of the drug have been found in picture frames, figurines, even small amounts hidden inside cassette tapes, she said. Most of the parcels are addressed to locations in Sacramento, Fresno and towns and cities in Minnesota and Wisconsin, two upper Midwest states with substantial Hmong and Laotian communities. Airmail is the preferred smuggling method because packages tracked with a routing number via the Internet are never claimed if they are held at any one location too long, Burnett added. Now that the opium harvest has begun in Asia, federal customs officers expect to see smuggling pick up again. But smugglers are hard to catch. Recipients of mailed opium have a way of sensing when they're under police surveillance and can simply toss the package in a closet and never open it, explained Tom O'Brien, a customs field supervisor in San Francisco. Even if a suspected drug user took the bait, attempting to prosecute an elderly refugee with no criminal record is a next-to-impossible task, a customs agent admitted. Despite inroads made by drug counselors and programs that assist community groups, the Hmong, Mien and Laotian communities remain closed communities, where word of mouth means everything. And some of his clients still turn to opium when methadone fails to dull the emotional or physical pain. "My community, the Mien, are close-knit and if one person seeks help and it doesn't work, the word gets spread around," Saecho said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth