Pubdate: Sun, 11 Jun 2006 Source: Sunday Telegraph (UK) Copyright: Telegraph Group Limited 2006 Contact: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/437 Author: Amrit Dhillon Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) COCAINE DEATH TAKES THE WRAPS OFF INDIA'S DRUG CULTURE A charismatic politician, touted as a future prime minister, is gunned down by his brother in a jealous rage. On the way to immerse the leader's ashes in a sacred river, his playboy son stops at a party where he and a friend snort cocaine and heroin. The cocktail kills the friend and leaves the playboy facing a lengthy jail term. It sounds like the stuff of Bollywood, but this is the real-life fall from grace of Rahal Mahajan, the 31-year-old son of the late Pramod Mahajan of the Bharatiya Janata Party, India's leading opposition group. While his father's murder last month was in many ways the staple fare of India's turbulent political scene, his own hedonistic private life has exposed the burgeoning drug abuse among the country's young elite. Commonly known as "namak", the Hindi term for salt, cocaine use has been a popular but highly secret indulgence among businessmen, Bollywood stars and the idle offspring of the rich. It took the death of Mr Mahajan's friend Bibek Moitra, after a party in New Delhi, to expose the extent to which it has grown along with the country's increasing affluence. Mr Moitra, 39, was also Pramod Mahajan's former secretary. Rahal Mahajan, whose uncle allegedly gunned down his father in a family feud, was discharged from hospital on Tuesday after spending several days in intensive care. He was then arrested and now faces prosecution for illegally possessing and distributing drugs, an offence which can carry up to 10 years in jail. His extravagant lifestyle appears typical of a new generation of wealthy young in India: he dabbled in film-making and a few other careers, and developed a taste for drugs. The disapproving Indian media have speculated that many wealthy drug users believe that family connections will save them. "The rich won't stop because they don't fear the law. They can pull strings," said Suhel Seth, an advertising executive. "We need to enforce strict penalties and make examples of some people to deter others." Last week, Apollo hospital stated that no drugs had been found in Mr Mahajan's blood sample, only to backtrack when independent tests proved otherwise. Police are investigating whether the hospital tried to protect Mr Mahajan. The Bombay film director, Vinta Nanda, says that cocaine snorting is routine on the city's cocktail circuit. "It's everywhere. Everyone is doing it. It's at every party. People think it's fashionable and trendy," she said. Cocaine, at 6,000 rupees (UKP80) a gram, and ecstasy are the drugs of choice. For traditionalists, the combination of increased drug use and greater sexual promiscuity is yet another sign that India is sinking into "Western debauchery". Many fear for the future of the country's biggest asset - its large population of educated young adults, for whom new jobs in India's booming IT sector have brought undreamt-of wealth. "Society is losing its cultural moorings as external influences intrude. Drugs have greater social acceptability than before, and parental authority over the young is weakening," said Samir Parekh, a psychiatrist at Max Healthcare hospital in New Delhi. In the farmhouses of the rich on the outskirts of Delhi, weekend parties typically start with heavy drinking and good food. Later in the evening, a dealer will be contacted by telephone and code words used to order "namak". "After snorting it, everyone is energised, lively, exuberant," said Rati Kapoor, a wealthy student who is a regular on the party circuit. "Then people start pulling the chairs and tables back and dancing. The cocaine injects a new lease of life and it goes on till 3 or 4 am." Drugs were also leading to a loosening of morals in other areas, Miss Kapoor added. Many of those who indulged at parties would then disappear for casual sex - something unheard of among previous generations. But, while publicity surrounding the case may have uncovered a hidden world, it seems to have done nothing to curtail it. Last week Bombay police seized a 200kg consignment of cocaine at the city's port - Asia's largest single drug haul. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman