Pubdate: Fri, 25 Jun 2004 Source: Dispatch (South Africa) Copyright: 2004 Dispatch. Contact: http://www.dispatch.co.za/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2942 DRUG SHOCK SHOCK, police in the Netherlands believe, is the best way to stop children experimenting with drugs. When police have a young addict in the severe stages of withdrawal - sweating, shivering and sick - they ask the addict to share their experiences with others. The police then visit nearby schools and collect children aged about 13 or 14, just the age they are most likely to begin playing with drugs, and bus them to the rehabilitation centre. They learn about the drug-taking experience from somebody not much older than themselves. Combined with other strategies - and in spite of a policy which tolerates dagga, under strict conditions - Netherlands police believe the rate of addiction to hard drugs is coming down, against world trends. The best cure, they believe, is never to start. Or, as one parent put it, an addict is never cured of the drug habit, they are only in remission. By the measure of some street children in South African cities, 13 and 14 is already too late. They have been addicted for years. Two police traps this week suggest the scale of the problem. Four tons of methqualone, the main ingredient of mandrax, and R70000 in cash were found in KwaZulu-Natal; 84 bags of dagga worth R2,3 million were confiscated in the Free State, destined for Cape Town. A total of 61 000 people were arrested last year on drug-related charges, according to Director Bala Naidoo. The police had also identified 65 drug syndicates operating in South Africa. Whether abuse is increasing or decreasing is difficult to track. Statistics on illegal drugs depend almost entirely on police actions. When the police are working vigorously to track and arrest drug traffickers, the statistics show an increase, when they should almost certainly show a decline. If police do nothing, the apparent rate of drug dealing appears to drop to nothing, when it almost certainly increases. Nor does any increase or decrease in statistics matter much to families living with an addict, young or old. That the problem is widespread and serious is clear from the quantities of drugs which are found and the profits to be made from moving them. Teenagers are naturally given to adventure and experiment and varying degrees of emotional volatility. Drugs appear to offer a suitably defiant and fashionable release. If they are readily available, the risks are very high. The way back from addiction can be long and difficult. The Central and Eastern Cape Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence (Sanca) marks a week leading to tomorrow's International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking with several events in East London. "Treatment Works" is the theme of a session in the City Hall from 9am to noon today. From 6pm this evening until 6pm tomorrow, Sanca holds a 24-hour marathon support group meeting at Victoria Methodist Church in Quigney, which will include Teenagers Against Drug Abuse (Tada). Tada also has a talent contest and Miss and Mr Tada competition at the Port Rex Technical High Schools at 6pm this evening. Telephone (043) 722 1210. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake