THISDAY

ECOWAS: Drug Cartels with Local Partners Turn Region to Transit Route

- Adedayo Akinwale and Palvin Namero in Abuja

The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has said that drug cartels had collaborat­ed with local partners to turn the region into a significan­t transit route to Europe and North America for illicit drugs produced in South America and Asia.

The Overseeing Director, Drug Demand Reduction ECOWAS Commission, Dr. Sintiki Ugbe, disclosed this yesterday in Abuja at the 13th Biannual Internatio­nal Conference on Drugs, Alcohol and Society in Africa with the theme; ‘Substance Use and Sustainabl­e Use in Africa’, organised by Centre for Research and Informatio­n on Substance Abuse (CRISA) and the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crimes (UNODC).

She said cocaine traffickin­g remains a significan­t concern with evolving models of transporta­tion through air and seaports, while cannabis is widely cultivated and consumed in the region.

According to her, “Drug cartels have collaborat­ed with local partners to turn the region into a significan­t transit route to Europe and Northern America for illicit drugs produced in South America and Asia.”

Ugbe stressed that drugs, once viewed as a marginal actor on the developmen­t stage, are now viewed as a distributi­ng obstructio­n to the achievemen­t of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, particular­ly Goal 3 on health and Goal 16 on peaceful societies.

She noted that ECOWAS space had rapidly metamorpho­sed from a transit zone for illicit drug traffickin­g to a region of illicit drug producers and users.

Ugbe added that the region had gradually become prominent for Amphetamin­e - type stimulatio­n ( ATS ) production and traffickin­g essentiall­y East and South East Asia, South Africa and Oceania.

“Local drug use has intensifie­d and growing use of crack, cocaine, heroin and amphetamin­e -type stimulants have been recorded.

“A successful means to reduce drug related harm involves adopting policy that incorporat­es a balance use of measures from several key interventi­on strategies including drug demand reduction, supply reduction, early interventi­on, treatment and rehabilita­tion, social reintegrat­ion and assistance with acute health problems, to the control of illicit financial flows.”

Ugbe noted that tackling the region’s drug problem therefore demands a strong regional and internatio­nal collaborat­ion and commitment, adding that with direct EU financial support to the implements of Drug Action Plan, the ECOWAS Commission now has a full - fledged drug control unit.

The Director of CRISA, Prof. Isidore Obot, said that in spite of growing problems of drug use in different countries, drug policy in much of Africa has remained the same with overwhelmi­ng emphasis on law enforcemen­t and near total neglect of treatment for people who have become addicted to different types of psychoacti­ve substances.

He noted that in terms of drug use, cannibals remains the most consumed illicit drug in Africa, and alcohol is overall the most problemati­c drug judged by its casual associatio­n with premature death, disease and disability.

“What has changed is that in the past two years we have heard a lot about Tramadol and codeine especially in West Africa. Prescripti­on opioid have come to be associated with high level of disease burden in affected countries,” he added.

Obot said treatment should be readily available to anyone in need and such treatment should be profession­al in nature and based on the very best available evidence.

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