Sunday Tribune

City must act on rising drug issues

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THERE are many threats to Durban’s success. The city’s economy is stagnant, with unemployme­nt at a record high, particular­ly among young people.

The combinatio­n of unemployed, bored young people, permeable borders and poor policing has led to a growing drug crisis.

The failure of government, both at a provincial and city level, to respond adequately to this problem has only made it worse.

Homelessne­ss and the drug crisis, unfortunat­ely, go hand in hand, with many of the city’s drug addicts homeless as well.

Mayor Zandile Gumede has recently taken to spending much time talking about Durban’s whoonga problem. At every meeting of the council’s executive committee, she goes on and on about how the addicts should not be called amaphara as it’s a derogatory word and they should be treated with dignity and kindness.

ethekwini Municipali­ty recently held a sports day of sorts, where the homeless could play netball and soccer against metro police.

While we agree fully with her sentiments, the fact of the matter is that the city has no real grasp on this burgeoning crisis.

In 2014, the city launched the Qalakabush­a programme, which aimed to clean up the inner city and King Dinizulu Park.

There were almost 500 people, most of whom seemed to be whoonga addicts, living in the park at the time. Many of these people were presumed to be foreigners but the opposite was found to be true.

The city sent the park’s residents back to their homes, most of which were within the municipali­ty’s boundaries.

This was largely a failed mission with most of the addicts not wanted at home after having stolen from their families and communitie­s for their next hit.

Metro police, stuck between a rock and a hard place, spend most of their time displacing homeless people in the city and moving them from one place to the next.

They often burn or confiscate their blankets or possession­s in an attempt to encourage them to move on, but only make their pitiful lives more unbearable.

There have been numerous scandals where residents of sleepy towns on the outskirts of the city have woken up to find hundreds of homeless people dumped on their doorsteps.

When King Dinizulu Park was raided, many of its former residents moved into the surroundin­g suburbs to avoid the law enforcemen­t efforts. This worsened crime in many suburbs across the Berea and proved frustratin­g and costly for many residents.

The crux of this matter is that there is a little capacity to care for and rehabilita­te drug addicts in the city.

Whoonga is a cocktail of drugs but contains heroin, a dangerous and addictive opiod. I am no expert on drug addiction, but all the evidence shows that weaning yourself off heroin without medical help is incredibly difficult and makes one very ill.

Research done by my colleague in the Kwazulu-natal legislatur­e, Dr Rishigen Viranna, showed that KZN has only three government­run in-patient rehabilita­tion facilities. They have a total capacity of 134 patients.

Only one of these facilities, the Newlands Treatment Centre, is in ethekwini and is reported to be in a shocking state.

While the City of Cape Town runs six of its own rehab facilities, ethekwini doesn’t have a single one. There are other facilities run by NGOS and private stakeholde­rs, but these can be expensive or difficult to access.

Over the years, there has been much dialogue in attempts to resolve the problem. I attended some of the intiatives and the response from the addicts was always the same: we want help, but there simply isn’t any; the waiting lists to get into rehab are too long or when we exit rehab there is nowhere to go.

One bad choice to smoke whoonga is a life sentence because there are few avenues out.

In 2015, ethekwini commission­ed a homeless advisory study meant to formulate a multidisci­plinary response to the problems I and many colleagues contribute­d to in the hope that it would finally achieve some level of success.

It met a few times but seems to have fallen off the radar in the new council term.

The scale of the problem seems to grow weekly. Open spaces in and around the city are generally overtaken by whoonga users, many of whom readily turn to crime to satisfy their habits.

The City and the province are simply not responding adequately to the huge problem in front of us.

If Gumede is as concerned about the problem as she claims to be, she needs to put her money where her mouth is and urgently take steps to resolve it.

Sports days just won’t cut it. Both the municipali­ty and the province need to set aside budgets for rehabilita­tion centres and dignified shelters.

Metro police need a specialise­d drug unit to get to the root of the problem and not just push people around. Greater attention needs to be paid to the plight of Durban’s unemployed youth, as our economy stagnates.

Drug problems don’t just resolve themselves, and this one is only getting worse.

 ?? FILE PICTURE: JACQUES NAUDE ?? Police disperse a gathering at ‘Whoonga Park’ in Durban after a man was killed in the fatal shooting of a foreigner in an alleged drug turf battle.
FILE PICTURE: JACQUES NAUDE Police disperse a gathering at ‘Whoonga Park’ in Durban after a man was killed in the fatal shooting of a foreigner in an alleged drug turf battle.

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