Pubdate: Sat, 06 Jul 2013 Source: Nigerian Tribune (Nigeria) Copyright: 2013 African Newspapers of Nigeria Plc. Contact: http://www.tribune.com.ng/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4188 Authors: Muhammad Sabiu-Gusau; Oluwole Ige-Osogbo; Kola Oyelere-Kano; Tunde Ogunesan-Ibadan and Jude Ossai-Enugu INDIAN HEMP EVERYWHERE Even, 9-Year-Olds Have Become Consumers -- NDLEA NDLEA figures: Lagos, Kano, 278 suspects/1200kg of hemp; Oyo, 207 suspects/2,631kg of hemp; Zamfara, 322 suspects, Osun, 219 suspects/85 hectares of hemp farms/6,022kg of hemp; Enugu, 70 suspects/595kg of hemp APART from those ubiquitous white painkiller tablets, Indian hemp is gradually emerging as the most abused drug in Nigeria. Anyone who doubts this only needs to stroll into any of the motor parks, liquor joints, abandoned buildings (public and private), mechanic workshops, major bus stops and spots where railway lines pass through markets or parks in Nigeria's major towns, to mention just a few. In fact, anywhere unemployed (mostly uneducated) youths can be found, one is sure to find some people puffing away at the forbidden weed -- even in broad daylight. Ironically, almost on a weekly basis, the media is awash with news of several kilogrammes of the product seized and publicly incinerated by the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), making one to wonder if the drug regulatory agency is only after those who deal (trafficking in large quantities) in the narcotic drug. Saturday Tribune gathered that the young men who abuse this drug, including touts, commercial drivers, street urchins (popularly referred to as Area Boys), are also the same people who habitually live on the different brands of gin, whisky and rum that are now being produced in pocket-friendly sizes, including sachets. They not only take their daily dozes of these spirits and smoke their 'favourite weed', they have also found a way of up-scaling the effects by boiling the spirits together with a popular brand of tea. When ingested, they say, the effect is psychedelic -- and, for some criminal reasons, they get their kick from that. Is it not surprising then that there is an upsurge in psychotic behaviour (and in some cases, sheer madness) among youths today? But the situation is about to get worse still. According to reports, nearly half of adults in the United States of America have tried marijuana, 12 per cent of them in the past year, according to a survey by the Pew Research Centre. Fifty-two per cent of adults are said to favour legalising marijuana, up 11 percentage points just since 2010, according to the survey. Sixty per cent think Washington should not enforce federal laws against marijuana in states that have approved its use. "We're on this hundred-mile-an-hour freight train to legalising a third addictive substance," says Kevin Sabet, a former drug policy adviser in the Obama administration. Depth of marijuana crisis in Nigeria In Nigeria today, despite the much-trumpeted fight against abuse of hard drugs, notably marijuana, the situation is not looking too good. ZAMFARA The number of youths currently neck-deep in marijuana abuse in Zamfara State, especially Gusau, the capital, is alarming, according to investigation. And as to be expected, different kinds of violent crimes, including house breaking, murder, arson, intimidation and so on have been on the upswing. Areas most affected are Birnin Ruwa, Kofar Mani, Kofar Jange, Hayin Bugaje, and Tullukawa. Others are Hayin Dan Hausa, Dan Bedi, Hayin Mala Sani, and Dogon Dabino. Worried by the development, the state governor, Abdul'aziz Abubakar Yari, recently constituted a special task force, under Inspector Abubakar Mohammed Dauran, with a mandate to curtail the activities of these youths. Dauran told Saturday Tribune that the committee has been able to arrest 322 youths and dispossessed them of their weapons. OSUN Authorities of the Osun State command of the NDLEA say they have destroyed 85 hectares of farmland used to cultivate Indian hemp in four different locations in the state. In the last one year, the agency also said that its operatives have intercepted 6,022 kilogrammes of the weed, and arrested 219 suspects with drug exhibits. Of the 219 suspects arrested, 199 were males, while 20 were females. The commander of the agency in the state, Ms. Anthonia Eden, said her command would continue to clamp down on criminals involved in illicit drug trade and that anybody caught would be made to face the full wrath of the law. Eden said, "85 hectares of cannabis sativa farmlands were destroyed in four different locations in the state. The breakdown of the destruction is as follows: 30 hectares at Oloro Arinkinkin reserve in Isokan Local Government Area, on August 5, 2012 and 10 hectares at Ikeji-Ile in Oriade Local Government Area, on September 11, 2012." She also disclosed that five hectares farmland of the illicit weeds were destroyed at Oloro Araromi, on September 25, 2012 while 40 hectares were destroyed at Ago-Owu Forest Reserve on November 12, 2012 -- all in Isokan Local Government Area of the state. During the period under review, Eden stated that the agency secured 76 convictions while 102 drug dependent persons were rehabilitated and reintegrated back to the society. She reiterated the commitment of the command towards having a drug free society and appealed to all stakeholders to collaborate so as achieve the goal, stressing that her command would continue to hold lectures, seminars and other public enlightenment programme to sensitise the populace on the danger inherent in drug abuse and trafficking. KANO In Kano, the agency says it has intercepted 1200 kilogrammes of the weed while 220 kilogrammes of other psychotropic substances were seized in various raids within and outside the state capital. According to the state commander of the agency, Mr. Ahmed Garba, the clampdown on suspected illicit drug dealers and traffickers has led to the arrest of 278 drug suspects, out of which 148 have been convicted and sentenced to various jail terms by the Kano Federal High Court. Garba noted that Indian hemp tops the list of illicit drugs commonly abused by addicts in the state, but he believes his men have done creditably well in drastically reducing the scourge. "We are on course, though the challenge is still there. Taking such volume of illicit drugs off the street is on its own a huge effort, and again for us to have secured conviction of offenders from the court is also an achievement. We believe that one day, we will achieve the ultimate result; which is to eradicate illicit drugs completely," he told Saturday Tribune. Garba bemoaned the inadequacy of manpower and equipment available to the agency, saying that Kano, being a highly populated state with an estimated 10 million people, needs commensurate resources to achieve results. "We do not have enough vehicles to do the job. The personnel strength is equally inadequate as we are very few. Of course, another problem is finance, which is needed for intelligence gathering, since the drug war is intelligence-based," he added. Garba commended the state government and other sister agencies for their support. OYO In Oyo State, the state command of the NDLEA has been able to identify certain areas regarded as the major depots of cannabis in the state. According to the Assistant Commander, Operations and Intelligence, Oyo State Command, Godwin Inyamah, an area known as Parapo area in Beere, Ibadan South East Local Government, is the headquarters of cannabis and other drugs in the state. "The command, over the years, has been able to identify some locations which have high concentration of cannabis and other drugs in the state, and I can confirm to you that Beere in Ibadan is the headquarters. "Other locations include Olomi Academy, Oja'ba, where they recently attacked our officers; Idi-Arere, Mapo, Challenge, Sasa, Ojoo axis, Iwo Road, Orita Aperin, Gate, Oje, Omoyale area, Dugbe, Orita-Merin, among others," Inyamah said. Apart from working on the finished products which are freely abused in motor parks, Inyamah said the command had also been able to locate some cannabis farms in the state, and is currently destroying them. Some of the farms in Ibadan, according to him, include Odo-Ona Elewe in Oluyole Local Government; Gambari forest, Tola village (also in Oluyole Local Government), and Ikoyi, among others. He, however, noted that the problem besetting the total eradication of cannabis is the high demand for it in the market, coupled with its profit margin. "With our investigation, a young man can begin cannabis business with just N2,000, get a table or stand in a motor park, sell and go home with big profit. With that, it is becoming increasingly tasking to really stop the sale and consumption because of this factor and many more," he lamented. The Oyo State Commander, NDLEA, Mrs Omolade Faboyede, also revealed that the command had identified a relatively new dangerous drug which is in circulation in the state. She said: "The new demon and specie in psychoactive substance, which is peculiar to Oyo State, is called Skonk or K2. The NDLEA, before now, had been making seizures and creating awareness on the dangers inherent in cannabis sativa, but with the emergence of the new and stronger substance called K2, there is need for more concerted efforts, else our youths, the future hope of any virile nation, will be consumed." She noted that the age bracket mostly affected in the state is between nine years and 30 years. Mrs Faboyede revealed that the state command in the last five months had "arrested a total of 207 suspects (195 males and 12 females) with 2,631 kilogrammes of cannabis, 14 grammes of cocaine, 0.8 grammes of heroin and 2.110 kilogrammes of psychotropic substances. Also, within the same period, the command convicted 28 persons." Faboyede said cannabis sativa and K2 (skonk) are the command's major problems now. She also noted that the abuse of cannabis has led to increase in the level of school dropouts, truancy, various crimes and increase in madness. ENUGU Even as it has remained the pride of Ndigbo, Enugu today, like other metropolitan cities, has had its own share of the problem of illicit use of hard drugs, especially with the influx of people from the North to the area. A visit to Enugu and its environs would reveal several hideouts (black spots) where miscreants go for illegal substances. Some of these include Obiagu jungle, Ikiliki-Awkunanaw, Gariki, Amechi-Topland, Emene and the outskirts of Abakpa-Nike. Already, 70 (62 males, eight female) persons have been arrested for unlawful possession of these banned substances, while 595.717 kilogrammes of Indian hemp had been seized in the last six months by the state's command of the NDLEA. The state commander of the agency, Mr. Anthony Ohanyere, also said that 6.2 grammes and 0.5 grammes of cocaine and heroin respectively were seized within same period. He added that 13 persons were prosecuted and convicted at the Federal High Court, Enugu, while 35 drug addicts were counseled and rehabilitated during the period. Apparently disturbed by the growing rate of drug addicts in the state, Chairman of Udenu Local Government in the state, Dr Godwin Abonyi, recommended the expansion of the NAFDAC's model of pharmaco-vigilance programme to track new psychoactive substances emerging out of the traditionally listed drugs. In his recent lecture entitled 'New Psychoactive Substances', in commemoration of the 2013 UN's International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking, Abonyi also suggested the amendment of existing laws so as not to limit the scope to established list but any other substance which experts in future detect to be psychoactive. Abonyi lamented the increasing involvement of the youth in drug abuse and drug trafficking. He identified increased crime rate, stigmatisation, exams failure, income loss, crisis in the family, disorderliness, among others, as some of the dangers inherent in drug abuse. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom