The Independent on Saturday

Drug dad laments divorce

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divorce is not simple. It actually affects older kids worse.”

He said he and his son were close, his boy played sport and he had no idea anything like this would happen.

“I didn’t know he was suffering so badly.”

Poison

What further shocked and angered him was that the substances in circulatio­n that children had access to were no longer just drugs. “They are poisons.”

He vowed to act against the dealers, as well as help get to the root of problems that may have caused his son to take the tablets. He acknowledg­ed that it was not the first time the boy had tried drugs.

“I know I can’t stop the dealing, but I can stop the poisoning,” he said.

He said drugs were a scourge in the Highway area.

“The government can’t stop it. We, as individual­s, have no chance, but we can try to alleviate the problem by making sure reduced volumes come into our areas.”

He said he was out to “get” the dealers of these “poisons” and had been working closely with the Hawks and private investigat­or Brad Nathanson.

From this experience, he had come to realise that nightclubs, as well as all-night trading places, were where drug dealers hung around.

He added that since the incident he would check up on the condition his son was in when he returned home and that he would be forbidden to sleep out.

Recalling the horrific evening when he found his son was in trouble, he said: “Within 10 minutes of taking it, he started having problems. In 20 minutes he was unconsciou­s.”

However, the boy had managed to summon a passer-by on the streets of Pinetown, which led to both him and his ex-wife being alerted.

“An elderly guy from a local neighbourh­ood watch, taking his dog for a walk, and a young woman with medical training came to their rescue.”

On arriving at the scene, the father put his son in his car and took him to hospital.

“He was unconsciou­s for at least three hours.”

Praised

He praised the boy’s school for having a visionary approach to the problem, but did not wish to elaborate.

The father said he was himself “very anti-drug” and showed scars on his shoulder from an altercatio­n with a local cocaine dealer.

He also said he neither smoked nor drank alcohol and that his son had been aware of his attitude to drugs.

“But I was also naïve. All that was around during my youth was dagga and mandrax. Stuff like cocaine and heroin hadn’t come into the country very much.”

He said he found it scary that it was now easier for youngsters to buy cocaine than to enter a bottle store to buy a six-pack of beers.

Meanwhile, the South African National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence (Sanca) has said it’s not only in illicit laboratori­es that dangerous drug concoction­s are made.

Dangerous mixes are also emanating from medicine chests, using legally sourced medication, according to the organisati­on’s Durban office.

In KwaZulu-Natal, it was mainly men who were treated for such over the counter addiction.

The acting director of Sanca Durban, Walter Petersen, said yesterday at the start of Sanca Week that the human body was not designed to deal with such combinatio­ns.

A Sanca statement added that parents were often unaware that their teenagers were raiding their medicine cabinets and having “fishbowl” parties.

“This is where everyone throws medication in a bowl and they share it.

“Normally alcohol, cigarettes and/or other illegal drugs are involved,” said Petersen.

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