Pubdate: Sun, 09 Oct 2005 Source: Times, The (UK) Copyright: 2005 Times Newspapers Ltd Contact: http://www.the-times.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/454 Author: Nick Meo Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) LAOS: UN HAILS THE COUNTRY THAT WENT COLD TURKEY ON OPIUM From Nick Meo in Hua Phan Province, Laos SINCE doctors confiscated Kua Ya's pipe in February the septuagenarian grandmother has been forced to stop using opium. She used to smoke six pipes a night, to help her to sleep and ease her aches. At the same time officials pulled up poppy plants growing on the hillsides of her village in northern Laos, part of a Communist Party programme to eradicate the drug by next year. They have been largely successful. The UN says that Laos, from being the world's third biggest source of opium, has reduced poppy production by 73 per cent in the past five years. This has won the Government plaudits, notably from the US. The results are clear on the hillsides of Hua Phan province on the Vietnam border. Two years ago slopes that were awash with white and purple blooms now grow rice. And villages where about one in ten was an addict have undergone collective cold turkey. Villagers are eager to express their enthusiasm for the end of a vice which has plagued the hill tribes for generations. Unlike Burma and Afghanistan, most of the poppies grown here have been consumed by Lao addicts, rather than exported. Opium was made illegal only in 1996. Sy Kham, a blacksmith, has managed to give up on his second attempt after being threatened with jail. "It was hard, like something was eating my bones and making me vomit," he said. "But I feel healthier and we grow rice instead so my family has more to eat." His village of Hua Moun had 24 addicts, but communal pressure forced all of them to give up. Domestic abuse is said to have dropped hugely; addicts were notorious wife-beaters. Mrs Ya, whose teeth are still stained black from opium, agreed it had been a scourge. Several addicts she knew had plunged their families into desperate need by selling their pigs for a smoke. Most were incapable of much work. But she admitted to more mixed feelings in her own case. "Nothing else works for my back trouble and nothing else gets me to sleep," she said. "The white pills the doctor gave me are useless. I do miss my opium." Laos used to have the second highest concentration of opium addicts in the world. UN figures show that the number has dropped from 63,000 in 1998 to about 21,000 today. Action was taken after the party leadership declared at the seventh congress in 2001 that Laos would be made opium-free. Old-style communist zeal was brought into the battle -- the Youth Pioneers have been champion poppy-eradicators. Critics have claimed that the Government has used harsh methods, forcibly clearing villagers from poppy-growing areas and resettling them in disease-ridden camps where many have died. There are also fears that after the party's triumph is declared at next year's conference, the Government will lose interest and the poppy may creep back. Opium mafias are said to have pushed deep into the jungles on the border, out of reach. And a new problem looms -- yaaba, an amphetamine produced in Burma which is becoming the new drug of choice, fuelling crime in the sleepy capital, Vientiane. - ---