Pubdate: Sun, 21 Dec 2008 Source: Daily Nation (Kenya) Copyright: 2008 Nation Newspapers Contact: http://www.nation.co.ke/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/868 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) IT'S DANGEROUS TO RENDER ANTI-DRUGS POLICE POWERLESS There have been press reports that the authorities at Vigilance House may have "downgraded" the Anti-Narcotics Unit, the team that is assigned the task of fighting drug syndicates and arresting and prosecuting the masterminds. The unit is normally headed by a top police officer, sometimes in the rank of senior assistant commissioner of police, which to some extent signals to the public the seriousness with which the force is taking the fight against drugs. The police spokesman has told the Sunday Nation that the unit is merely being reorganised and will come out stronger. Whatever the case, it would be unwise not to have a strong anti-narcotics team given the disturbing drugs situation in the country. ALTHOUGH DRUGS WORTH MILLIONS of shillings continue to be trafficked into the country by sophisticated and well-organised international drug syndicates led by West Africans, and barons from Eastern Europe, the ANU which operates under the Director of Criminal Investigations is reporting fewer successes of late. No major seizures have been made since 2006 despite a World Drugs Report indicating that large quantities of heroin, cocaine, cannabis and methaqualone continue to be smuggled into the country. Kenya leads Burundi, Ethiopia, Mauritius, Rwanda and Seychelles in the region in drug trafficking incidents. A few years ago, the Commissioner of Police found it fit to appoint a senior assistant commissioner to head the unit. All detectives who served in the unit during the December 2004 seizure of the Sh6.4 billion cocaine haul have apparently since been deployed to other duties. By Friday, the unit was under the command of a police inspector. The Sunday Nation notes Spokesman Eric Kiraithe's reassurance that the unit is very much active and functional. His argument that ANU "exists to be felt and not to be seen" is probably also a good one. HIS REVELATION THAT THERE IS AN "intention" to acquire new vehicles and equipment for the unit is also a blow for the right cause. But Kiraithe's sentiments must be taken in the context of an alert by the National Agency for the Campaign Against Drug Abuse (Nacada) -- the government agency whose job is to co-ordinate public education campaigns against drug and substance abuse -- that the drug problem has reached crisis levels. As reported in this paper, Nacada estimates that in Lamu district, 10 young people are dying every day from drug-related complications. They have found that Nairobi and Coast provinces are hard hit by drugs, Eastern and North Eastern by miraa, Central, Rift Valley, Western and Nyanza by bootleg and bhang. IN ANY CASE, THE GOVERNMENT needs to think more seriously about Nacada's capacity. Although it has a high-sounding title that makes it look as though it is national in character, it only exists in Nairobi and has skeletal staff. It doesn't have a single office anywhere else in the country and yet the problem it is trying to solve is national in character. If the Lamu estimates are accurate, then the drug problem in Kenya has reached unacceptable levels. Every government agency should be alive to the possibility that the war on drugs could easily be lost. The time for action is long overdue. If nothing is done, and done quickly, society is in danger of losing a good part of this and the next generation to drugs and bootleg while crime barons rake in billions of shillings. Part of the reason drug barons thrive in any country is because they corrupt those who are entrusted with the job of taking them out of business. To what extent has that happened here? - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake