Bay of Plenty Times

Despair fuels Afghan addicts

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Hundreds of men, strung out on heroin, opium and meth, were strewn over the hillside overlookin­g Kabul, some in tents, some lying in the dirt.

Dogs skulked around because they are sometimes given drugs, and there were bodies of overdosed dogs amid the garbage. Men here as well slip, quiet and alone, across the line from oblivion and despair to death.

“There’s a dead man next to you,” someone told me as I picked my way among them, taking pictures.

“We buried someone over there earlier,” another said further down.

One man lay face down in the mud, unmoving. I shook him by the shoulder and asked if he was alive. He turned his head a bit, just half out of the mud, and whispered that he was.

“You’re dying,” I told him. “Try to survive.”

“It’s fine,” he said, his voice exhausted. “It’s okay to die.”

I gave him some water, and someone gave him a glass pipe of heroin. Smoking it gave him some energy. He said his name was Dawood. He had lost a leg to a mine about a decade ago during the war; after that he couldn’t work, and his life fell apart. He had turned to drugs to escape.

Drug addiction has long been a problem in Afghanista­n, the world’s biggest producer of opium and heroin and now a major source of methamphet­amine. The ranks of the addicted have been fuelled by persistent poverty and by decades of war.

It appears to only be getting worse since the country’s economy collapsed after the seizure of power by the Taliban in August last year and the subsequent halt of internatio­nal financing. Families that were once able to get by found their livelihood­s cut off. Millions have joined the ranks of the impoverish­ed.

The growing numbers of addicts are found around Kabul, living in parks and sewage drains, under bridges, on open hillsides.

A 2015 survey by the United Nations estimated up to 2.3 million people had used drugs that year, about 5 per cent of the population. Now, seven years later, the number is not known, but it’s believed to have risen, said Drug Demand Reduction Department head Dr Zalmel, who like many Afghans uses only one name.

The Taliban, who seized power nearly a year ago, have launched an aggressive campaign to eradicate poppy cultivatio­n. At the same time, they inherited the ousted, internatio­nally backed Government’s policy of rounding up addicts and forcing them into camps.

On two nights earlier in the summer, Taliban fighters stormed two areas where addicts gather — the one on the hillside and another under a bridge. In total, they collected some 1500 people, according to officials in charge of registerin­g them. They were taken to the Avicenna Medical Hospital for Drug Treatment, a former United States military base converted into a drug treatment centre in 2016.

It’s the biggest of several addict treatment camps around Kabul. There, the addicts were shaved and kept in barracks for 45 days. They get no treatment or medication as they go through withdrawal. Since the Taliban ascent, the internatio­nal funding on which the Afghan Government relied has been cut off, so the camp barely has enough funding to feed its inmate-patients.

But the camps do little to break addiction. A week after the raids, I went back to both locations, and both were again full of hundreds of people.

At the site under the bridge, one man, Nazir, told me he spends most of his days here but goes to his house every once in a while. Addiction has spread throughout his family, he said.

When I expressed surprised that the den under the bridge had filled up again, Nazir gave a smile. “It’s normal,” he said. “Every day, they become more and more . . . it never ends.”

 ?? A drug addict smokes heroin in Kabul, Afghanista­n. PHOTOS / AP ??
A drug addict smokes heroin in Kabul, Afghanista­n. PHOTOS / AP
 ?? ?? Addicts wait to have their heads shaved at a treatment camp.
Addicts wait to have their heads shaved at a treatment camp.

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