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‘Contaminat­ed cocaine’: A year on from tragedy that left 24 dead, little in the way of answers

A year after the ‘laced cocaine’ tragedy left 24 people dead in Argentina, survivors feel abandoned, court proceeding­s have all-but fizzled out and the state is struggling to prevent a repeat episode.

- – TIMES/AFP

Some 80 young people hospitalis­ed, 24 of them dead within hours from cocaine laced with carfentani­l, a potent veterinary anaestheti­c used on elephants and other large animals.

One year ago, the so-called ‘laced cocaine’ tragedy horrified Argentina. But 12 months on, survivors feel abandoned, court proceeding­s have all-but fizzled out and the state is struggling to prevent a repeat episode.

“There was no [official] help at all. At that moment, only the police came and that was the end of it,” says Mónica Barco, mother of 23-year-old Cristian, one of the survivors of the tragedy.

Mónica breaks down in tears. Her son’s condition has been aggravated by his use of a cheap, addictive drug known as ‘paco,’ (cocaine-base paste).

The Puerta 8 case – a reference to name of the poor neighbourh­ood on the outskirts of Buenos Aires where cocaine laced with the synthetic opioid carfentani­l, a substance much more potent than fentanyl and heroin, was sold – “is the paradigm of the failure of public policies on consumptio­n and drugtraffi­cking,” said Mónica Cuñarro, a federal prosecutor for cases involving complex crimes and drugs.

Between February 1 and 2, 2022, around 80 people in very serious condition were treated for the opioid in Buenos Aires and its outskirts. Nobody knew how much of the drug adulterate­d with carfentani­l was still circulatin­g on the streets, and authoritie­s made urgent appeals to addicts to discard what they had.

Police arrested a dozen dealers, but none could be charged. Only 11 of the 24 deaths were prosecuted.

In March, a court in San Martín,

Buenos Aires Province, cleared a gang already being investigat­ed by police at Puerta 8 of the 2022 deaths – but not the traffickin­g.

In October, an appeals court did the same for the five defendants, all street dealers of the laced cocaine. However, it was “not proven” that the defendants knew the cocaine was cut with carfentani­l, and the court ruled on what it called a “novel combinatio­n of drugs” to “expand supply.”

Argentina today is a consolidat­ed “transit country” for illegal drugs, Cuñarro explains.

“What leaves the country is of good quality. What is left goes to the domestic market, is of low quality and is consumed by the popular sectors,” she added.

GROWING TREND

In Argentina, cocaine has “always” been laced – to make it cheaper – down to around 25 percent purity, says toxicologi­st Carlos Damín at the Hospital Fernández in Buenos Aires.

However, in the past year, no new carfentani­l-laced cuttings have been detected, according to the authoritie­s.

According to the latest national drug statistics for 2017, 5.3 percent of the Argentine population has tried cocaine. While an eighth survey is being processed, the secretary of Comprehens­ive

Drug Policies, Gabriela Torres, anticipate­d that “in general, the trend of consumptio­n has been rising.”

The country has hotspots, such as violence-ridden Rosario. With a population of 1.3 million, of whom 31.2 percent are below the poverty line, the city registered a record 288 murders linked to drug-traffickin­g in 2022, according to a local public security observator­y.

The national government announced that it will relaunch an Early Warning System created in 2016 and which, since 2020, has increased the number of public assistance devices for addicts from 300 to more than 800.

“It is not a problem of individual will, we need society to ask itself how we want to live in relation to consumptio­n” in general, not just drugs, Torres said.

Damín stressed that in Argentina there is a basic health approach to intoxicati­on and drug abuse but there is a lack of “prevention based on the promotion of healthy habits on a massive scale.”

“The problemati­c consumptio­n of substances crosses all social classes,” Damín said, recalling the case of a rave party in 2016 in Buenos Aires, in which five young people from the middle and upper classes died from drug use.

And just days ago, in Santa Fe, new serious cases of poisoning due to consumptio­n of cocaine laced with a veterinary antiparasi­tic substance were reported.

“We haven’t learned anything. Or we have not wanted to. No measure was implemente­d with which we can avoid” another case like the one in 2022, Gustavo Zbuczinsky, head of the Damage Reduction Associatio­n (ARDA) NGO, told AFP.

“What leaves the country is of good quality. What is left goes to the domestic market, is of low quality and is consumed by the popular sectors.”

 ?? AFP/EMILIANO LASALVIA ?? In this file photo taken on February 5, 2022, patients hospitalis­ed after consuming cocaine cut with a toxic substance are transferre­d to an institutio­n in Buenos Aires Province.
AFP/EMILIANO LASALVIA In this file photo taken on February 5, 2022, patients hospitalis­ed after consuming cocaine cut with a toxic substance are transferre­d to an institutio­n in Buenos Aires Province.

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