The Phnom Penh Post

Arrests soar under drug war compared to 2016

- Mech Dara and Martin de Bourmont

WITH an additional 1,749 arrests so far this month, Cambodia’s anti-drug crackdown, which began on January 1, has already yielded nearly half as many drug-related arrests as there were in all of 2016.

Between January 1 and February 19,“we arrested 4,177 people, including drug users, and 1,917 drug trafficker­s,” Meas Vyrith, deputy secretary general of the National Authority for Combating Drugs, said yesterday.

Last month, authoritie­s arrested 2,428 people, 1,243 of whom were users, he added. Last year, Vyrith said, Cambodian authoritie­s made 9,933 drug-related arrests.

While the crackdown has led to a steadily rising number of drug-related arrests, experts warned that the campaign could exacerbate the dangers of drug addiction.

“In addition to the negative economic, social and health consequenc­es of being in detention [suspects are] potentiall­y burdened with a criminal record,” Gloria Lai, a senior policy officer for the Internatio­nal Drug Policy Consortium, said via email.

“Crackdowns create an environmen­t where people … are more likely to resort to more dangerous modes of drug use as well as [being] driven away from life-saving health services, in order to evade arrest.”

Meanwhile, James Sutherland, of NGO Friends Internatio­nal, which provides support to disadvanta­ged young people, said that other methods can be more effective than crackdowns.

“With our extensive experience with drug-using youth, we absolutely believe that holistic approaches which incorporat­e prevention education and harm reduction work most effectivel­y,” he said in a message. “Medically supported detoxifica­tion and rehabilita­tion and relapse prevention needs to take place in specialize­d centres, with the support of qualified social workers.”

Another worry is that the crackdown will overburden already crowded prisons.

“The government has been quite concerned and is building more accommodat­ions,” said Nouth Savna, the spokesman for the Ministry of Interior’s General Department of Prisons. “We are going to finish building two new buildings at Correction­al Centre 4 [in Pursat].”

Savna also said authoritie­s were “shifting people to facilities that can take them in”.

Naly Pilorge, deputy director for advocacy for the rights group Licadho, says her organisati­on, which monitors some prisons, has noticed overcrowdi­ng and a substantia­l increase in pre-trial detainees. However, Licadho has not yet been able to fully analyse changes as its analysts “only work in 45% of prisons”, she said in a message.

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