Pubdate: Tue, 15 Nov 2005
Source: Jakarta Post (Indonesia)
Copyright: The Jakarta Post
Contact:  http://www.thejakartapost.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/645
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)

A FACTORY OF SHAME

Over a long period in a hamlet in Tangerang, Banten, workers have
quietly churned out illegal drugs in a factory licensed to produce
cables, seemingly without disruption, until fish in a nearby stream
died, from red and yellow substances dumped into the water it was surmised.

The substances were later found to be derivatives of the processing of
amphetamines and other drugs, confirming the police's earlier
suspicion, which led to the raid on Sunday, a raid said to be among
the most important in police operations so far, given the factory's
capacity to produce a million ecstasy pills a week worth Rp 100
billion (about US$10 million).

The war against any business profiting from addiction is a slow one,
and it is fitting that we congratulate the police for finally busting
what appears to be part of yet another international operation on our
soil.

From time to time we have received reports of the arrests of suspected
drug dealers, several of whom have been tried and convicted. But the
police know well that they are far from reaching the roots of the huge
tentacle that forms the drug syndicates, even though a few of those
arrests involved suspected operatives of those syndicates.

What was more surprising about the raid on Sunday, however, was that
the local police in the entire district of Jatiuwung -- about 100
kilometers west of the capital -- claimed ignorance of the factory and
its actual operation involving among others Chinese, French and Dutch
nationals. We are thus painfully reminded that the weekend
achievement, hailed personally by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono,
was in the same breath a harsh reminder that the weakness of our law
enforcers and related government agencies remain a major contributor
to Indonesia continuing to be an infamous haven -- like it or not --
for various international crimes.

In this vast country and its growing, porous areas like those in
Tangerang, local police are supposedly in the forefront in the
monitoring of criminal activities. We have been told repeatedly that
they are poorly paid, an excuse like the one made for officials who
process illegal identification documents, passports and business
permits. Strange then that we should bristle every time we are branded
as a haven for terrorism or drug smuggling, as long as we are still
going around in circles in working out how to put an end to both
corruption and the lack of professionalism among the people tasked to
protect the public against crime.

In an atmosphere like this vigilantism emerges, regardless of
widespread condemnation of people taking the law into their own hands.
There have been stories of the parents of drug addicts attempting to
shoot the suspected dealers themselves, aware that, for all the
government campaigns on drug abuse and police raids, the damage to
their children's lives cannot be undone.

Furthermore, while the growing number of former drug users involved in
antidrug campaigns and novel attempts at rehabilitation are
commendable, these efforts have not been able to keep up with the
activities of those involved in drug syndicates, walking in and out of
prison and resuming their businesses of peddling addiction.

From the accounts of former users, we can gather all too easily that
such successes are rare. The official estimate of an annual average of
two million drug addicts among a population of around 200 million has
done little to appease those who have seen firsthand the wasteful
impact of drug abuse on their young.

Behind the sensational sporadic news of arrests and raids are
thousands of families trying to cope on a daily level with members who
have been in and out of costly rehabilitation centers, where many
users even manage to develop access to drugs.

While such families are left to manage on their spare resources and
exhausted emotions in taking care of their own, then the least the
public can expect is much more visible efforts on the part of the
police to increase their protection of the public.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin