Kuwait & GCC states see huge rise in use of drugs
‘Satanist’ rituals at graduation celebration ceremony?
KUWAIT CITY, May 3: A random drug test at schools in Bahrain is being urged as a preventive move to combat what is perceived as a growing drug abuse problem among students, the Gulf Daily News reports.
A study by the Riyadh-based GCC general secretariat prompted MP Khalifa Al Ghanim to suggest that Education and Health ministries conduct a random drug-testing survey at schools.
Themed ‘Reducing Demand of Drugs, Narcotics and Psychotropic Substances’ù, the wide-ranging study was conducted by Gulf specialists under the direct supervision of interior ministries.
Results of the survey revealed alarming drug abuse trends even in primary schools.
The study revealed that 10 per cent of primary school students consume drugs sporadically, compared with 24pc at intermediate educational establishments.
The situation gets more alarming at GCC high schools as the rate of drug users is 36.6pc among first-year secondary students.
More than 20pc of the XI and XII standard students (second-year and third-year) admitted to using drugs while 5.8pc of university students said that they have started the habit.
The rate of drug abuse among primary school students ranges between 5pc to 10pc in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar and Oman but soars alarmingly to hit 25pc in the UAE.
In the intermediate stage, the rate of drug users ranges from 13pc in Kuwait and 23pc in the UAE.
Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Qatar have rates ranging from 30pc to 33pc, while Oman has the highest rate of drug use among intermediate students at 39pc.
Bahrain has the highest rate of drug abuse among first-year secondary students (51pc), compared with 28-30pc in Qatar and the UAE, while the rate ranges from 36pc to 38pc in Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Oman.
In the second-year and third-year secondary stages, Kuwait has the highest rate of drug use among students (32pc), compared with Saudi Arabia and Qatar (18-21pc), Bahrain, the UAE and Oman (10-12pc).
The proportion of university students who use drugs is highest (8-9pc) in Kuwait, the UAE and Qatar but ranges from 0pc in Bahrain and Oman and 5pc in Saudi Arabia.
According to the study, 2 to 3pc of primary students use drugs on a regular basis, but things get worse in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait (10-11pc), while Qatar and the UAE have the highest rate (25pc).
In the intermediate stage, Oman has the highest rate of regular drug users (32pc), largely ahead of Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Qatar (15pc) and the UAE and Kuwait (10pc).
The situation is alarming for first secondary students in Bahrain with 46pc using drugs regularly, followed by Qatar, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Oman (35-39pc) and the UAE (31pc).
Al Ghanim urged the ministries to extend a helping hand to sporadic drug users before they become hooked on drugs, and intensify anti-narcotics programmes. ‘Satanist’ rituals: The graduation celebration atmosphere at a hall in Rawdah witnessed strange rituals similar to that of the Satanists and it prompted the owner of the hall to call the security authorities, reports Al-Rai daily.
According to a security source one woman had hired the hall to organize the graduation ceremony with her friends.
The source said the owner was shocked to see young men attending the ceremony because he thought it was for girls only. The owner said the number of young men suddenly swelled to 60 men and women and most of them were dressed in black their clothes carrying the pictures of human skull and other strange pictures. Moreover, the celebration was also odd, so the owner called the police.
The source pointed out the invitees began to escape when they sensed the presence of police. The woman who had rented the hall said it was a naming ceremony for graduated students so that they could perform strange rituals.
Investigations revealed the woman has a file at the Criminal Investigations Department, and she had earlier organized a similar ‘party’. Investigations into the incident are continuing. ‘Unfit for drinking’: The Ministry of Health has revealed a team of its employees carried out lab tests on drinking water at government buildings — ministries and government schools and the result showed 90 per cent of this water in unfit for drinking, reports Al-Anba daily quoting Ministry of Health sources.
The sources added, water coolers and water tanks suffer from negligence and as a result of which gather bacteria and fungi has collected at the bottom which can cause various types of diseases according to medical reports.
The sources said the medical teams that participated in the field survey of the sources of drinking water is in the process of submitting its final report on the health status, with recommendation to replace the water sources and maintenance.