Pubdate: Tue, 13 Jan 2004 Source: Bangkok Post (Thailand) Copyright: The Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd. 2004 Contact: http://www.bangkokpost.co.th/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/39 EXPLOSION OF DRUGS IS NOT CRAZY OR FUN Last week's report on drug abuse by the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia Pacific states that Asian youths outside Thailand refer to methamphetamines as ``fun drugs''. It highlights that Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra has claimed victory in the war on what Thais call ya ba, the crazy medicine. Nothing has curbed the voracious appetite for this cheap and dangerous drug. Speed pills are the fastest growing illegal drug in the world, with Asia the epicentre of the explosion of abuse. This is not news in Thailand, but it must be cause for continuing concern. In 1990, the prime minister's Office of Narcotics Control Board reported 1,297 methamphetamine cases. Last year, close to twice that many suspected ya ba dealers were killed in the drug crackdown. What has happened is a lack of attention by authorities and community leaders across the board to this serious and debilitating threat. Government has paid lip service to the concept of a proper and sustained war against drugs, without follow-up. There are those who will snicker over the report in this newspaper that youngsters are seeking a drug-like high from heavy doses of cough mixture. That is the wrong reaction. Time after time, authorities have made progress in the drugs war only to see a different problem pop up in a different place. This occurs because of poor planning on follow-up action to a specific crackdown. It also occurs because drug problems are treated mainly as a matter of law enforcement instead of a society-wide problem. It is not because of ignorance or poor planning. In March of 2001, when Prime Minister Thaksin called his first drug conference, he called specifically for a "holistic'' approach. He said tackling the drug problem was like playing in an orchestra, each player with his own part to play. In fact, he was echoing the September 2000 recommendation of ONCB deputy secretary Kitti Limchaikit. He called on the government before Mr Thaksin's to "look at the problem with a new, more holistic vision'' and seek input from all sectors. Until now, these visions have been little more than suggestions. Drug crackdowns inevitably continue to target visible street peddlers and obvious, mostly poor abusers. The Mr Bigs of trafficking continue to smuggle drugs, corrupt officials and launder their profits. Even worse is that very young people, on the verge of deciding whether to use or avoid drugs, have little to sway them except a warning that if they use drugs they could wind up in jail. Time and again since his 2001 seminar, Mr Thaksin has spoken of the need for a proper war on drugs. Recently, he said petty abusers deserve early release from prison -- an idea the country supports. For purely selfish reasons, some agencies oppose such a simple and easily achieved goal. Some parts of the police office, for example, feel that dealing leniently with minor drug abuse will hurt their arrest statistics. The UN report now makes it clear that punishment alone is not a drugs policy. The Thai prison population has doubled in five years because of the ya ba problem. The 15 biggest jails have a capacity of 90,000 inmates, but a population of 170,000. The UN report indicates that even Mr Thaksin's popular but violent crackdown has only pushed a still growing demand for dangerous speed pills underground. Methamphetamine-type stimulants cause memory loss and impair thinking. Users risk malnutrition, bizarre and dangerous behaviour and -- for pregnant women -- severe damage to the foetus. They are a ``gateway drug'', as people coming down from their highs turn to heroin, marijuana or alcohol. Street peddlers are on the run and it is time for a serious drug war. It must aim to arrest big-time traffickers, shut down the Burmese border smuggling at any cost, and convince young people the use of crazy drugs is no fun. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens