Pubdate: Wed, 27 Jun 2007
Source: Hindu, The (India)
Copyright: 2007 The Hindu
Contact:  http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/874
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?135 (Drug Education)

RALLY, EXPO HELD TO PRESS HOME ANTI-DRUGS MESSAGE

Chennai: On Tuesday, the international day against drug abuse and 
illicit trafficking, girl students said no to drugs, signing up on a 
white board at Ewart's Girls Higher Secondary School in Purasawalkam. 
The board carried the slogan, 'Say no to drugs.'

An exhibition of various substances commonly abused was put up at the 
school premises by the Narcotics Intelligence Bureau-Criminal 
Investigation Department. About 2,000 students from Ewart's, Bains, 
Seventh Day and Alagappa Schools participated in a rally and formed a 
human chain. The children walked from Ewart's School through 
Poonamallee High Road and reached Alagappa School.

Senior police officers including Director General of Police D. 
Mukherjee, Additional Director General of Police Narendra Pal Singh 
and Chennai Police Commissioner Letika Saran toured the exhibition. 
Though the children may have hardly understood the significance of 
the slogan it was imperative that they were caught young to prevent 
substance abuse, the senior police officials said.

Mr. Mukherjee said curiosity could lead children to experiment and 
they may even find temporary relief but it could cripple them for 
life. Drug abuse could have a cascading effect and destroy the 
family. But, there is hope through de-addiction for drug addicts, he 
pointed out.

Mr. Singh said drugs were used to launder money, "but to contain the 
menace we have enough police machinery." So far this year, the police 
had arrested 12 people under the Goondas Act for dealing in drugs, he said.

TTK Hospital, a de-addiction centre in Indira Nagar, in association 
with non-government organisation Asha Nivas and women self-help 
groups in the city, conducted a daylong sensitisation programme on 
substance abuse. The focus was on alcoholism since the 20 women who 
participated in the workshop came from slums in Choolaimedu, Adyar, 
Thoraipakkam and Kilpauk, said Jacqueline David, senior therapist.

"Some of them were not even aware of alcoholism though they had seen 
it often enough in their lives. In slums ganja (cannabis) is a 
problem next only to alcohol consumption," she said.

This year's theme selected by the UN's Office on Drugs and Crime is 
'Do drugs control your life? Your life, your community. No place for drugs.'
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