Pubdate: Sun, 28 Mar 2004 Source: Daily Nation (Kenya) Copyright: 2004 Nation Newspapers Contact: http://www.nationaudio.com/News/DailyNation/Today/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/868 Author: Liz Gitonga HOW DRUGS FIND THEIR WAY INTO SCHOOLS Nairobi The issue of drugs finding their way into the hands of pupils and students in schools is not new. A study commissioned by the National Agency for the Campaign Against Drug Abuse (Nacada) says a large number of students across all age groups have been exposed to alcohol, tobacco, miraa (khat) and glue sniffing. The study shows that in Western Province, 43.3 per cent of students abuse alcohol while in Nairobi 40 per cent of the students have abused drugs. They start with cigarettes before graduating to harder drugs like cocaine and bhang. But perhaps a close look at the style or management of schools would give a hint on how drugs are sneaked into the institutions and why the students abuse them. Although for a long time unrest in schools, which has become a perennial problem, has been blamed on drug abuse and alcohol consumption, certain conditions have served to perpetuate the problem. Today, the market is flooded with cheap beer packaged in sachets, and kiosks that have mushroomed near schools serve as selling points of drugs. While the majority of students in schools that went on strike last year blamed it on poor communication between them and the administration, it is widely believed that such behaviour was influenced by drug consumption. Alliance High School Principal Christopher Khaemba agrees that poor communication could be a cause of indiscipline for students. "In my school, we have found it useful to have gatherings every morning and evening. Some of the Saturdays are also dedicated to open forums where students raise issues which are subjected to critical debate," Mr Khaemba says. There is also a suggestion box where they drop their complaints, which is only accessible to the Principal. "I pay attention to all the complaints." The National Agency for the Campaign Against Drug Abuse national co-ordinator, Mr Joseph Kaguthi, concurs that cheap alcoholic brands, readily available in the market, complicate matters in the effort to fight drug abuse among the youth. "Brewers and distillers are as many as the brands they make. Furthermore, bars are not the only selling points. The beer is literally being hawked to anyone and anytime with much abandon," Mr Kaguthi says. In Nairobi alone, there are more than 10,000 unlicensed liquor joints, some of which are temporary structures on road reserves. Mr Kaguthi says a task force will develop a programme for training of trainers who will be spread out in schools countrywide and serve as "drug masters" to counsel the students. "We have no alternative but to have a teacher in each school trained thoroughly on matters of drug abuse. These trainees will be required to guide and counsel the students," he says. Some 140 trainers will be trained at the national level and the programme will go down to provinces and districts. Ms Bertha Omanya, formerly the headmistress of a Nairobi mixed secondary school, says drugs use in secondary schools is not only a threat to academic performance but also peace within the institutions. But Mr Khaemba disagrees that heads of schools are entirely to blame for the "mismanagement" of the institutions. He says poverty levels have gone higher in the past 15 years, making it hard for parents to financially support the rehabilitation and maintenance of boarding facilities - a common complaint by students. "And the population of students has grown by leaps and bounds since the 1980s when the government stopped giving maintenance grants to boarding schools. "The comfort that the students are craving for, therefore, cannot be compared to then, when the population was small and manageable and funds for maintenance were readily available," he says. This mismatch has posed a special challenge to managers of boarding institutions and the students may not understand our position. Lenana High School Principal Peter Warui blames manufacturers of cheap beer packaged in cans and sachets. "These beers are making the fight against alcohol abuse and the management of secondary schools an uphill task. They need to be abolished," he says. He says alcohol is readily available in the market and sold cheaply, which makes it easy for the students to access it. "The cheap mini-packs are now being sold in kiosks and supermarkets. We have powdered beer in the market too. The manner in which this beer is packaged makes it easy for the students to sneak it into schools," Mr Warui says. Mr Kaguthi says some teachers, clergymen and parents also abuse the drugs openly. Some smoke in the presence of schoolchildren and influence them. Dagoretti High School Principal R.M. Murengi says some students access drugs especially during visiting days. "But efforts to scrap visiting days have always been met with a lot of resistance. The students would not understand why other schools have that privilege and not them," Mr Murengi says. Mr Khaemba says unrest in schools may arise when the students' daily routine changes haphazardly or if new items keep cropping up without an explanation. Similarly, when the routine is overlooked without any explanation or justification. "The school programme must not leave the students idle for too long or have a prolonged prep time, leaving no room for leisure or co-curricula activities," he says. High-profile indiscipline cases that have been blamed on drug abuse include the 1999 Nyeri High School arson in which four prefects were burnt to death by their colleagues and the Kyanguli Mixed Secondary School in which 67 students lost their lives in 2001 when their dormitories were set on fire. Last November, Kinyui Boys' High School in Machakos was burnt by rioting students. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh