Pubdate: Fri, 06 Aug 2004 Source: East African Standard, The (Kenya) Copyright: 2004 The East African Standard Contact: http://www.eastandard.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1743 DRUGS: THE GOVERNMENT HAS FAILED THE PEOPLE Nairobi The war against drug abuse in school is, on paper, everyone's war. The government for instance decries, at the top of its voice, the abuse of drugs in schools and attributes the recent wave of school unrest to drug abuse. But this is all it does. Lets examine what it has done in way of fighting drug abuse. The previous government established the National Campaign Against Drug Abuse (Nacada) whose remit was to establish the extent of drug abuse in the country. This was a positive step and, by all standards, Nacada under Joseph Kaguthi and now under Roselyne Onyuka as acting director, has done a good job. It has brought us staggering statistics of drug abuse in this country. But this is all the law allows it to do. Nacada's work is only to warn us of the presence of a fox but it has no authority to arrest the fox or put up the fences to prevent us from wandering towards where the fox is. The work of arresting and prosecuting lies elsewhere. In 1994 the government enacted a law mandating the ministry of health to set up rehabilitation centres for drug abusers. None, so far has been established. The result is that there are more and more drug abusers in the country but very few, if any, is being rehabilitated. Worse, the government knows it for a fact that drug use is widespread in schools. But apart from lamenting, alongside all other Kenyans, it is doing virtually nothing to arrest this problem. Yet it has all the powers to do something. Why, the people of Kenya must ask, is the government letting down the young generation in this fashion? Statistics show that millions of students and school leavers under 29 abuse drugs. Most of the strikes and destruction of property in schools are attributed to drug use. Yet in the light of these glaring facts, the government has shown an appalling ambivalence towards the fight against drugs. In the light of these inescapable facts, this is one country that does not have rehabilitation centres for alcohol and drug abuse. And we say we have a future? The future is in the youth. But most of our youth are living in a hopeless present, having chugged forward from a desperate past and now are facing a destroyed future. Every day the government pays lip service to this problem, a critical nail in our coffin as a society is driven. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh