The Phnom Penh Post

Is the drug crusade effective?

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statistics. Branded as a sixmonth endeavour at the outset by the government, the crackdown should be reaching its end, though a senior official told The Post yesterday that a July meeting will help to determine if it will continue beyond the half-year mark.

While the crackdown’s effectiven­ess in deterring drug use overall is unknown, a few things are clear: it has led to significan­t disruption­s in outreach programmes, put pressure on crowded prisons and has received harsh criticism from human rights observers.

According to National Police spokespers­on Kirth Chantharit­h, the first 163 days of the campaign saw the arrest of 4,298 suspected drug dealers and trafficker­s and 3,569 drug users. Observers say that despite the high number of “trafficker­s” arrested, the actual campaign tells a different story.

While emphasisin­g t he importance of halting the drug trade, the United Nations Office of the High Commission­er for Human Rights spokesman Sovanna Mann expressed concern that “equal treatment is meted out regardless of the quantity of drugs found, the level of profits gained or whether medical attention is needed, rather than incarcerat­ion”.

Human rights observers also called attention to overcrowdi­ng in Cambodian prisons, which Cambodian Center for Human Rights Advocacy Director Duch Piseth said has drasticall­y increased the number of Cambodians awaiting trial in detention.

“The use of extended pre-trial detention was already a problem in Cambodia before the recent crackdown. With this huge influx of new detainees into Cambodia’s already over- stretched criminal justice system, disproport­ionate and unjustifie­d restrictio­ns on the liberty of those facing criminal charges, as well as their right to be presumed innocent, are only likely to worsen,” Piseth said.

The drug crackdown has caused alarm among local HIV prevention NGOs and the World Health Organizati­on ( WHO), who fear it will cause a spike in the already high HIV rate among injecting drug users, which was nearly one in four as of 2012. According to WHO Country Medical Officer Laurent Ferrandini, for arrested users, accessing antiretrov­iral drugs was “difficult or impossible in some detention locations”.

“People using drugs were more difficult to reach through prevention programmes as they tend to avoid contacts that could lead to their identifica­tion as they become more afraid of being arrested,” he said. He believed this fear accounts for a dip in the number of people visiting NGO-run drop-in centres providing basic HIV care and prevention services.

Mith Samlanh, an organisati­on that provides HIV prevention services, noted an alarming drop in programme beneficiar­ies receiving services, with the organisati­on distributi­ng 17 percent fewer clean needles and syringes in the first five months of the year, compared to the same period last year, because fewer beneficiar­ies had lined up to collect them.

“In order to ensure the quality of services, the [people who inject drugs (PWID)] need to at least receive three to four needles and syringes a day,” explained Sem Sithat, a Mith Samlanh representa­tive.

Another reason for the decline may be that the police have targeted people with any equipment related to drugs – including clean needles – for arrest.

“When [the police] go for the crackdown, they don’t care if you are using drugs; if they find equipment related to drugs, they will arrest,” said Mith Samlanh outreach worker Thearith, who did not want to disclose his name because he was a former user himself.

Data collected by Mith Samlanh showed a 10 percent overall decline in PWID participat­ion among the 430 people in the NGO’s programmes.

According to another representa­tive, Pin Sokhom, around 100 of the organisati­on’s beneficiar­ies were arrested during the campaign. Last year, the organisati­on was able to reach about half of its 430 participan­ts more than twice week.

“But right now [we reach] less than 15” people more than twice a week, he said. “They [are] afraid to access services.”

HIV prevention NGO Khana, which serves as the flagship organisati­on for HIV services provider Korsang, also reported a high number of arrests – 41 out of more than 300 people they serve. Of these, a recovering heroin addict with HIV named Thhan Dang died in early May, having been unable to access methadone and antiretrov­iral therapy during his incarcerat­ion at the Prey Speu detention centre in Phnom Penh.

While medical services do exist in prisons and detention facilities, Khana Executive Director Chob Sok Chamreun said, they do not respond to the needs of an ever-growing population of incarcerat­ed drug users. “They just treat based on the symptoms,” he said. “If you [have a] fever, they give fever medication; you are shaking, they give medication to prevent shaking. Is that drug treatment? No.”

Despite their reservatio­ns, neither Khana nor Mith Samlanh condemned the anti-drug campaign. Representa­tives of both say they support the initiative, but hope for better collaborat­ion between the government and organisati­ons providing support to drug users.

“Our definition of success might be different from the government,” said Sithat.

“For us, we can say that if the victims are arrested, they can have the appropriat­e services, access social services when they are released, they can have opportunit­ies like other people, and they have no chance of relapsing and are healthy. Then it is success.”

Sithat proposed the government share informatio­n with outreach programmes about which users have been arrested and about needed services. Expanding methadone substituti­on therapy to prisons and other facilities would also help. Currently, the Khmer-Soviet Friendship Hospital in Phnom Penh houses Cambodia’s only methadone clinic.

Prisons Department spokesman San Keo dismissed worries that prison conditions were not adapted to the needs of drug users, stressing that the users have a personal responsibi­lity to improve their lot. “They receive food and medical treatment like everyone else, and when they change their behaviour and attitude [to become] like normal people, they will receive skills education,” he said, citing sewing classes for women, and woodworkin­g and welding classes for men.

Among six drug users interviewe­d by The Post last week, three had spent time in prison and detention centres. Of these, all continued using drugs, with two reporting that substances remained easily accessible within prison walls.

Asked whether the government could do more to cooperate with civil society, National Authority for Combating Drugs Secretary-General Meas Vyrith proposed via SMS that NGOs “come to [the] NACD for discussion”.

Vyrith said that he considers the campaign a success and suggested it could be extended, though the government has not decided whether it will do so. This decision, he said, depends on the outcome of a meeting planned for early July involving “the NACD, relevant government institutio­ns and provincial governors”.

However, Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director for Human Rights Watch, criticised the measures that have already been taken, saying drug users face “extortion and violence” from police followed by more abuse in rehabilita­tion centres, and that the drug war should be getting wider attention internatio­nally.

“What’s amazing is this story on Cambodia’s own drug war has almost been almost invisible in the internatio­nal news, perhaps because it’s hard to compare to the savagery of the Philippine­s’ shoot them down on the street drug war, and internatio­nal editors see only room enough for one drug war story,” he said.

 ?? HONG MENEA ?? Sok, 35, tells of his battle with addiction over coffee last week in Phnom Penh.
HONG MENEA Sok, 35, tells of his battle with addiction over coffee last week in Phnom Penh.
 ?? MARTIN DE BOURMONT ?? Mith Samlanh programme beneficiar­ies at the organisati­on’s headquarte­rs in Phnom Penh.
MARTIN DE BOURMONT Mith Samlanh programme beneficiar­ies at the organisati­on’s headquarte­rs in Phnom Penh.

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