Pubdate: Tue, 23 Dec 2008 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2008 The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: MARINA JIMENEZ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/mexico MEXICO: STRUGGLING TO COPE WITH SOARING ADDICTION AT HOME Calderon Government Has Launched Numerous Prevention And Education Programs To Stem A Key Contributor To Narco-Violence MEXICO CITY -- On his darkest days, Jorge snorted 15 grams of cocaine and went through several packages of Delicados cigarettes. He stole from his parents to fuel his addiction, lost his job and most of his friends. Finally, he came to believe his life was "worth nothing." "I always got high alone. I would call my dealer and he would bring me my dose," says Jorge, a furtive man with brown eyes that flit around the room and a craggy face that looks older than his 38 years. Mexico, long known as a lucrative cocaine corridor to the United States, has become a country with a serious domestic drug problem. In the past five years, the number of drug addicts has almost doubled to 307,000. The number of people who have tried drugs rose to 4.5 million from 3.5 million in this period. About one-fifth of the cocaine that passes through the country from Colombia and the other Andean countries is now consumed locally, mostly by people aged 15 to 30. The rest goes to the world's biggest drug market: Mexico's neighbour to the north. President Felipe Calderon, who has launched an all-out offensive against the country's powerful drug cartels, unleashing a reaction of grotesque violence and beheadings, has also targeted domestic consumption. The country's historic approach to addiction was captured in Steven Soderbergh's 2000 Oscar award-winning film Traffic. When Michael Douglas's character, the U.S. anti-narcotics czar, asked his Mexican counterpart about treatment, the man answered with this Hollywood hyperbole: "Addicts treat themselves. They overdose." Mr. Calderon's government always names the domestic drug market as a key contributor to narco-violence, and has launched numerous drug prevention and education programs. He has also introduced a proposal under which people found carrying small amounts of drugs can avoid prosecution if they declare they are addicts and submit to a treatment program. If not for his botched suicide attempt, Jorge may never have received help. But last year, after a neighbour found him hanging by a towel in his apartment, she called his parents, who brought him to a drug rehab centre in downtown Mexico City. He was diagnosed with a depressive disorder and put on anti-convulsive drugs. "I used drugs to deal with the pain in my life," says Jorge, who credits the clinic's psychiatrist and his daily medication for keeping him clean. When he began using cocaine in his 20s, the drug was still relatively uncommon. "There was a very small group of drug addicts. Now it has become a huge circle. Young, old, people without teeth, men, women," says Jorge, a former car salesman. Every year, about 2,000 tons of cocaine come onto the Mexican market - much of it is consumed by young men, says Monte Alejandro Rubido, secretariat of Mr. Calderon's National System of Public Security. And in a country where 20 per cent of the people live in poverty, drug dealers come in many forms. The street trade, known as narcomenudeo, is a new front in the war on drugs. "We have the impression that drug dealers have beards, cowboy boots and sombreros, but no, they are housewives, old people, ordinary people," said Mr. Rubido in an interview in his Mexico City office. "They don't believe they are doing anything wrong and are just looking to make an extra $600 a month. That is why Mexico has such a pervasive drug culture." For many years, drugs were socially unacceptable in this conservative, Roman Catholic country where many people live with their families until they marry. But the social stigma of drug use has faded, particularly for men, as more and more drug transporters are paid in drugs instead of cash. Tijuana is now a thriving centre for methamphetamines, made for export as well as local consumption. In Ciudad Juarez, a methadone clinic has opened to treat heroin addicts. Alma Garcia Alcaraz, Jorge's psychiatrist, says there has been an alarming increase in the number of drug addicts. "Cartels are selling more and more drugs in Mexico now," she said. "Many use crack, which is much more addictive, cheaper and stronger." A piedra, a rock of crack cocaine, sells for as little as $2. A grapa, a small amount of powder cocaine, goes for $5. Persuading addicts to get help is very difficult. It can take as long as a decade for someone to enter treatment and the success rate is only 40 per cent. Crack addicts often don't have that kind of time. Programs are needed to target them more quickly, said Ricardo Sanchez Huesca, head of research at the rehab centre, a national network of 110 clinics funded by the government. "The government is fighting the narco-cartels. But we can't yet call it a success. We have drugs available on every street corner," he says. Addicts congregate in parks, dilapidated homes and corner stores. Many dealers are small-time, and include abuelitas who used to sell tortillas on the street. "Now they sell a gram of coke," Jorge says. "It's so easy to get the drugs, so more people end up using them." THE SERIES The Globe's Marina Jimenez reports from Mexico as the country struggles to contain a spiralling crisis of drugs and violence. Yesterday: As drug cartels fight each other and the police, the death rate from violence surpasses that of Iraq. Today: Long known as a lucrative cocaine corridor to the United States, Mexico has become a country with a serious drug-addiction problem. Next: As the government squeezes the profits of drug cartels, more and more turn to kidnapping, car-jacking and extortion as lucrative sidelines. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin