Pubdate: Mon, 31 Jan 2011
Source: Mail and Guardian (South Africa)
Copyright: Mail & Guardian, 2011
Contact:  http://www.mg.co.za/mg/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/254
Pubdate: 31 Jan 11
Author: Kristin Palitza
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

HIDDEN ADDICTION IN ZANZIBAR

As tourists stroll languidly through the narrow streets of Stone 
Town, the romantic city hums with life. Vendors sell oriental spices 
and colourful fabrics, while children play soccer between crumbling 
walls and men hurry in long gowns towards the mosque.

But when darkness descends over the historic town, Zanzibar's capital 
takes on a different life. Formerly bustling alleys are transformed 
into dim, shady passages where drug addicts hover to get their 
longed-for heroin fix. The town's dark secret: the island is a heroin 
stronghold.

The underbelly of this holiday paradise remains unknown to most 
tourists, however, who spend carefree vacations on the archipelago. 
The tropical island is mainly renowned for its spices and slave 
history and as a diving destination -- and its government wants to 
keep it that way.

Reliable statistics for heroin usage are not available, but the 
island's health ministry estimates that at least 7% of Zanzibar's one 
million inhabitants are addicted to what is commonly called "brown 
sugar". NGOs say every 10th person is regularly using heroin.

"Heroin abuse is very common, especially among younger men. It is 
easily available and much cheaper than other drugs, like cocaine or 
ecstasy," says Masoud Haji, project manager of the Zanzibar 
Association of Information against Drug Abuse and Alcohol (Zaiada).

"There is no one on this island who is not affected by heroin. 
Everyone knows someone who is addicted -- a family member, a 
relative, a colleague or a friend," he says.

On to the next

One shot of heroin -- called a kete on Zanzibar -- costs a mere R7. 
And those who can't afford it practise blood-flushing -- a method 
used by addicts to draw back a needleful of blood after they have 
shot up heroin and sell the thinned fix to the next person.

"Everyone here knows where to buy heroin and most addicts inject 
quite openly on the streets," says Haji. Those who pay attention can 
see used needles lying in the street corners and alcoves of Malindi, 
the northern part of Stone Town, near the harbour. But needles can 
also been found in the bushes around Forodhoni Gardens, a popular 
tourist hang-out in the heart of Stone Town.

Insufficient trade controls make East Africa a welcome transit point 
for drug traffickers. Zanzibar lies on a century-old shipping route 
from Afghanistan - the world's biggest heroin producer -- via India 
to East Africa.

The island's small harbour is often the first stop for drug traders, 
who smuggle their drugs from here in small fishing boats into 
Tanzania's capital Dar es Salaam. From there narcotics are trafficked 
into different parts of the continent and to Europe.

When a new delivery of heroin arrives on the island the whispered 
news travels at lightning speed. "Everyone who has some connection to 
heroin will hear within a few hours that mzigu [Swahili for "new 
luggage"] has arrived," says Haji.

The question why the government of the semi-autonomous archipelago, 
which belongs to Tanzania, doesn't get the problem under control, he 
refuses to answer.

But Abdulrahman Abdullah, an ex-addict, who works for NGO Sober 
House, is more blunt than Haji. He believes the heroin trade is 
flourishing because its high profits are in the interest of the government.

Turning a blind eye

"We will never solve the heroin problem in Zanzibar because 
politicians, police and rich businessmen are all involved and get 
kickbacks for turning a blind eye. The island is so small. If the 
political will was there, the drug problem could quickly be put to an 
end," he says.

Abdullah has been clean for a year. The 36-year-old tried heroin for 
the first time as a student and was hooked. The drug controlled the 
next 17 years of his life. "I injected to live and lived to inject," 
he says. "Heroin has destroyed everything I had. I lost my family and 
my professional future."

To get money Abdullah became involved in armed robberies. "I spent a 
big part of my adult life in prisons and psychiatric institutions. It 
was hell," he says. As part of his new start in life his goal is to 
help other addicts.

One of his proteges is 29-year-old Rama*, who is sitting on a bed in 
one of the sparsely furnished rooms at Sober House, where he has been 
a resident for the past two months. With the typical empty stare of a 
heroin user, he talks about his life.

It is already his second attempt to quit his decade-long addiction. 
Rama was clean for six months in 2009, but then suffered a relapse. 
"Only very few succeed in saying goodbye to heroin forever," says Abdullah.

With heroin, Rama's life changed drastically. The young man, who 
comes from an established, well-known Zanzibar family, quit school 
shortly before matric and started to steal to finance his R120-a-day 
drug habit -- big money in a country where the average daily wage 
ranges between R10 and R15. "I would have done pretty much anything 
to get my hands on heroin," he says.

When his family finally threw him out Rama's life went from bad to 
worse. The grandson of a high court judge, he started to prostitute 
himself to get his next fix. "I sold my body to homosexual sex 
tourists and with it my last bit of self-respect," he says.

There has only been one recent blessing: a few days ago Rama's HIV 
test came back negative. He is incredibly relieved, he says, because 
infection rates are high among addicts who share needles and do sex work.

Although Zanzibar's official HIV infection rate is only 1%, every 
fourth heroin addict, or 26%, is infected with the virus, according 
to Zaiada. * Name changed
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom