National Post

‘WE HAVE A DISASTER HERE’

CRYSTAL METH POURS INTO IRAQ FROM IRAN BORDER AS COUNTERNAR­COTICS SQUAD OVERWHELME­D

- LOUISA LOVELUCK, MUSTAFA SALIM

SAY WE HAVE 30,000 ADDICTS IN BASRA, AND THERE ARE JUST 22 BEDS IN WHICH THE PATIENTS NEED THREE MONTHS EACH TO RECOVER. WELL, HOW DOES ANYONE GET A PLACE IN THOSE BEDS?

— GEN. ISMAIL GHANEM, THE HEAD OF BASRA’S ANTI-DRUG UNIT

Inside the dilapidate­d headquarte­rs of Basra’s drug unit, the colonel’s stack of case files rarely shrinks. Yet every night below the flickering fluorescen­t lights, chatter thrums before a new round of raids. The officers sound exhausted.

Iraq is in the throes of an addiction epidemic as parts of a generation impoverish­ed by war and neglect is turning to the drugs that are flooding the country. Basra’s understaff­ed and underfunde­d counternar­cotics squad is overwhelme­d.

At the centre of this blight is the cloying heat and crushing poverty of Basra, where jail cells are full and dealers have police on their payroll so kingpins remain untouched. But the origins are far away, in the cool mountains of Afghanista­n and the undergroun­d laboratori­es of Iran where new supplies and techniques have led to a flourishin­g trade.

“We have a disaster here,” said Col. Ehab, a career intelligen­ce officer who was directing the house raids on a recent night. He spoke on the condition that only his first name be used over concerns for his security.

Since the 2003 U.s.-led invasion opened Iraq’s border with Iran, there has been a constant flow of people, religious pilgrims, trade and smuggling, including of drugs. But it was around 2017 that a new menace appeared — crystal meth.

A domestic crackdown on Iran’s growing drug problem was making the basic ingredient­s difficult to come by when producers in Afghanista­n unlocked the secret to extracting a key component of methamphet­amine, ephedrine, from the local ephedra plant.

Today, the fruits of that discovery are found throughout the region. On the night Washington Post reporters accompanie­d Basra’s drug squad on its raids, there were almost 700 people crammed into the unit’s three holding cells, built for 200 in total.

As Ehab and his drug squad snaked toward the shanty districts on Basra’s northeaste­rn edge, they worried their nightly arrests were only magnifying the problem, as dealers used their time on the inside to recruit more people.

Seizures of crystal meth from Afghanista­n and Iran have increased dramatical­ly across the Middle East in recent years, according to regional officials and experts, as it has followed the well-worn path of the older opium and heroin trade.

In Turkey, security forces seized more than 51/2 tons of methamphet­amine last year with raids along the Iranian border and in Istanbul. In just the first seven months of 2022, the number jumped to 8.6 tons.

Turkish authoritie­s report the smuggling network involves Iranian nationals with links to domestic organized crime networks and parts of the supply are intended for onward shipment to the European Union, Southeast Asia and Australia. Jordan’s anti-narcotics department, meanwhile, reported seizures of methamphet­amines soared to more than 45 tons in the first nine months of 2022 — more than 20 times more than the same period last year.

“(The year) 2017 was a game changer,” said David Mansfield, an expert on Afghanista­n’s illicit economy. Local producers shifted from using over-the-counter medicines — used in the rest of the world to make ephedrine — to the widely available ephedra, growing wild on Afghan hillsides.

“Suddenly you’ve got this new player on the block that is producing methamphet­amine at half the price,” Mansfield said.

With a booming market for the drug existing in Iran, the producers decided to start using the cheaper materials imported from Afghanista­n, said Alexander Soderholm, an analyst at the European Monitoring Center for Drugs and Drug Addiction.

“So the logic is effectivel­y, why don’t we outsource all this to let us focus on the distributi­on side of things and also possibly production for external markets?”

The sudden surge in crystal meth supplies was soon spilling into Iraq where decades of conflict, corruption and dysfunctio­nal governance have left the country in crisis. Reports of drug seizures top news broadcasts almost daily. While the reported annual seizures of hundreds of kilograms are likely a deep undercount, even these numbers are doubling every year.

The trade is protected by powerful armed groups, some of them linked to Iran, as well as tribal networks and corrupt officials, according to Iraqi security, border and judicial officials.

“We’ve had officers arrested for this. They covered for criminals and they were on the dealers’ monthly payrolls,” said Ammar Shaker Fajr, a judge in Basra’s Third Investigat­ive Court.

In February, gunmen killed a senior judge in nextdoor Maysan province. In September, a general from the region’s anti-drug squad was shot dead outside a restaurant. Basra’s drug squad is receiving a growing tide of threats, too.

“There are days I just think about quitting,” Ehab said. “I already feel like a dead man.”

The flow of drugs is accelerati­ng what civil society workers and health officials describe as a growing crisis of despair among Iraq’s youth. Public services have been ruined by corruption and mismanagem­ent, and unemployme­nt is rising as the farmlands dry up and cities offer little succour.

“Our young people want an escape but they don’t understand what they’re taking,” said Enas Kareem, the founder of Iraq’s only charity dedicated to helping users. She said there are no solid figures for addiction rates, but some officials estimate up to 40 per cent of Iraqi’s youth in some areas have tried drugs.

Crystal meth floods the user with a sense of euphoria and invulnerab­ility. When addiction sets in, paranoia takes over and the immune system breaks down as organs are pushed to failure.

In many cases, former addicts say they started using drugs as solace from troubled lives. They spoke on condition that only their first names be used.

Maher, a 30-year-old baker in Baghdad, said he fell in with the crowd that introduced him to alcohol and amphetamin­es after growing cripplingl­y lonely at home. His sister was killed during the U.S. invasion, his brothers during the subsequent sectarian civil war, and his parents, three years later in a car crash.

In Basra, a 37-year-old taxi driver, Firas, was struggling to stay awake on long journeys when a dealer showed him a white powder — it turned out to be methamphet­amine — that he promised would unlock the secret to longer work hours and better earnings.

He used for three years before his wife begged relatives to intervene after he began physically assaulting her, he said.

In recognitio­n of the growing problem, a law was passed in 2017 ordering the establishm­ent of government-run rehabilita­tion facilities for addicts within the next two years, but five years later there are only three across the whole country, and only one in Basra.

“Say we have 30,000 addicts in Basra, and there are just 22 beds in which the patients need three months each to recover. Well, how does anyone get a place in those beds?” said Gen. Ismail Ghanem, the head of Basra’s anti-drug unit.

When Firas went to bed at night, he’d ask himself whether he could ever stop using. When he woke in the morning, he would buy his next dose from the taxi hangar, where he worked.

He said that it was a volunteer with Kareem’s charity who saved him. The young man, Hassan Majeed almaliki, visited and said the nearby hospital had a spare bed.

And if there hadn’t been a bed? “Then, I tell them that there is nothing we can do,” Maliki said.

“Iraqis are very good at talking, but where’s the action? We don’t see it,” Ghanem said. “All we do is arrest people.”

That is precisely why many of Maher’s friends have been scared to seek help for their addiction.

“If they arrest someone taking drugs, they will beat the crap out of them,” he said.

The drug squad’s first target was down an unpaved road without street lights. They said an informant had identified the location, and when the SWAT team stormed out with guns readied, a man in his 40s surrendere­d without a fight. Inside his one-storey house, the unit found dozens of small pouches containing a white crystal-like substance the officers believed to be meth, a set of small measuring scales and a loaded gun in each of the three rooms.

But at a house several districts to the north, the scene grew messier. Two women were already screaming obscenitie­s at the police force by the time they reached the front gate. Four young men were pulled out for questionin­g and a 17-year-old with messy hair was sobbing.

Back at the station, the suspects were placed in a holding cell and brought for interrogat­ion one by one. Last was Moslem Dawoud, the alleged dealer whose home, police said, contained 16 doses of crystal meth.

“We can help you, you know,” the officer said.

After a long silence, Dawoud shared what he said was the name of his dealer.

“It’s like this every night,” Ehab said. “You do the raids, you do the paperwork, you’re in a loop. Then you lie down, you wake up and you start again.”

 ?? PHOTOS: YOUNES MOHAMMAD / THE WASHINGTON POST ?? A suspected drug dealer is arrested in Basra, Iraq, where the trade is buoyed by armed groups, tribal networks and corrupt officials.
PHOTOS: YOUNES MOHAMMAD / THE WASHINGTON POST A suspected drug dealer is arrested in Basra, Iraq, where the trade is buoyed by armed groups, tribal networks and corrupt officials.
 ?? ?? Gen. Ismail Ghanem, head of Basra’s anti-drug unit. Drugs flowing in from Afghanista­n and Iran have created an almost insurmount­able problem.
Gen. Ismail Ghanem, head of Basra’s anti-drug unit. Drugs flowing in from Afghanista­n and Iran have created an almost insurmount­able problem.
 ?? ?? Officers with an anti-drug unit search the house of a drug dealer in Basra, where jails are full and dealers have police on their payroll.
Officers with an anti-drug unit search the house of a drug dealer in Basra, where jails are full and dealers have police on their payroll.
 ?? ?? Maher, a baker in Baghdad, says he turned to drugs and alcohol because of crippling loneliness.
Maher, a baker in Baghdad, says he turned to drugs and alcohol because of crippling loneliness.

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