Pubdate: Sat, 31 Jan 2004 Source: Straits Times (Singapore) Copyright: 2004 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. Contact: http://straitstimes.asia1.com.sg/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/429 Author: Laurel Teo HELP SCHEMES PUT EX-ADDICTS BACK ON THEIR FEET TOUGH laws are not the only reason why Singapore is winning the battle against drug abuse. Rehabilitation and preventive programmes are just as important, says the Home Affairs Ministry (MHA), which yesterday released figures showing a decline in the drug problem over the past decade. Between 1993 and 1998, the number of drug abusers arrested fell steadily from 5,857 to 4,502. By last year,it had fallen dramatically to 1,785. The statistics are part of the ministry's rebuttal to a blistering report by Amnesty International on Jan 14, that attacked Singapore's execution record. Amnesty argued that the authorities should resolve the social conditions that give rise to drug abuse and addiction, 'rather than resorting to executions as a solution'. 'Despite the use of the death penalty and high execution rates, drug addiction continues to be a problem' in Singapore, it said. Neither is true, said the ministry. Firstly, a drug addict is not sentenced to death, but to a drug rehabilitation centre (DRC), for treatment and counselling to help kick the habit. Recovering addicts are sent to a halfway house, where they are gradually re-integrated into the community. Various agencies also help ex-addicts get jobs and instil a strong work ethic in them. In the last few years, Singapore has also taken preemptive action, by designing and targeting preventive drug programmes at students and youths who are out of school. This holistic approach has worked, said the ministry, pointing to the declining arrest rate. As further proof, it added, fewer addicts are going back to the drug habit. Of the DRC inmates released in 1994, almost eight in 10 were detained again within two years. By 2000, the proportion had fallen to six in 10. But the MHA also made no apologies for the tough laws. Because Singapore is so small and so close to the Golden Triangle, the poppy-growing region that is part of Myanmar, Laos and Thailand, it is 'particularly vulnerable to the drug menace', it said. So, the death penalty plays 'a key role in deterring organised drug syndicates from establishing themselves in Singapore and keeps the drug situation under control'. Of the 138 executions in the last five years, 110 were for drug-related offences. Amnesty alleges that a number were sent to death row for possessing 'relatively small quantities of drugs'. The ministry countered that the death sentence is meted out only to those who possess more than 15g of heroin in its pure form. This is equivalent to a slab of about 750g of street heroin, which can be made up into more than 3,700 heroin straws, with a street value of more than US$100,000 (S$170,390). 'Amnesty International may consider this as 'fairly small amounts of drugs', but Singapore certainly does not,' said the ministry. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom