Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

DRUG REHABILITA­TION AND WEB OF DECEIT

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The proliferat­ion of narcotics, such as heroin, cocaine, cannabis, ecstasy and ice, in Sri Lanka, their widespread use and the subsequent addiction to one or the other of these intoxicant­s is only too well known. Although news of the detection and seizure of large quantities of narcotics and the arrest of narcotic peddlers, distributo­rs and trafficker­s is regular news in the electronic and print media, the end to the narcotics menace is nowhere in sight. Unlike the deadly COVID-19, which is often described as an unseen enemy, the equally deadly narcotics trade including the increasing supply to meet the increasing demand is no longer a secret.

Recently there was the alarming news of a new method of drug traffickin­g through the sale and use of inhalers, normally used in respirator­y illness, targetting students attending schools in Colombo and the suburbs.

According to Police Spokesman SSP Jaliya Senaratne this has been found to be one of the latest and frightenin­g methods being used by peddlers to lure unsuspecti­ng schoolchil­dren to the use of narcotics. He said investigat­ions had been launched after several parents had handed over such inhalers to the police.

Alongside the curse of drug addiction come several drug rehabilita­tion centres, on the one hand operated by the State at Kandakadu and Senapura in the Polonnaruw­a District in the news recently in connection with the Covid-related clusters and on the other hand the several rehabilita­tion centres operated by the private sector.

One such was Seasons Lanka, a branch of an Australian-type drug rehabilita­tion centre, which was highlighte­d in the Daily Mirror last week and other such centres are our focus today. The investigat­ive report said Britisher, Charles Jeevan Beare had checked into this rehabilita­tion centre seeking a cure for his addiction to Ketamine. But sadly though, five weeks into the rehabilita­tion process, his mother Maryanne India Beare was informed of the death of her 37-year-old son.

The centre located at Waskaduwa in Kalutara is known to have attracted drug-addicted foreigners through an aggressive advertisin­g campaign and according to the report had been functionin­g for nearly five months allegedly outside any government regulation­s. It was abruptly shut down in the wake of Charles’ death.

An engineer by profession, Charles was battling his addiction for many years. His friends and family are said to have helped him to raise 5,200 pounds sterling, the equivalent of Rs.1,300,000 for the much-awaited three-month-long rehabilita­tion programme at Seasons Lanka, the Daily Mirror investigat­ive report said.

The aforesaid brings to the limelight the grave concerns about such private drug rehabilita­tion centres that operate outside the radar of government regulation­s and the kind of treatment dispensed to drug addicts who knock on the doors of these centres seeking relief and release from the tentacles that the addicts are entwined in. The DM report says that according to the Alcohol & Drug Informatio­n Centre (ADIC), more than 35,000 Sri Lankans die of alcohol and tobacco use annually and that many are being diagnosed with mental disorders from the use of narcotics such as cannabis and heroin. It says that currently, the private rehabilita­tion industry in Sri Lanka is growing, largely unregulate­d and highly expensive.

ADIC says that with the growing demand for treatment to wean away addicts from their dependence on narcotics, tougher standards, better screening and greater oversight are needed to improve patient safety because the lack of oversight of the drug rehabilita­tion industry rebounds negatively on the addicts and their families.

According to the National Dangerous Drugs Control Board (NDDCB), there are more than 12 private drug rehabilita­tion centres located in the Colombo, Gampaha and Kalutara districts operating without a valid license. The DM ‘Eye’ report quotes NDDCB Chairman Dr. Laknath Welagedara as saying that under the guidance of the Defence Ministry the NDDCB is making every effort to regulate these centres.

Where the government-operated rehabilita­tion centres are concerned, there is without doubt the assurance that they provide a service at little or no cost to the addicts who seek help. But what of the centres operated by private entities whose motive according to the DM report is to fleece unsuspecti­ng drug addicts often at the end of their tether, depressed and despondent. Private drug rehabilita­tion centers are a lucrative business, extorting money from the vulnerable addicts and their families desperatel­y seeking a cure for their loved ones with the lack of regulation­s only benefiting the unscrupulo­us owners. Will the authoritie­s be jolted into wakefulnes­s and regulate these questionab­le private rehabilita­tion centres before something drastic happens?

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