Drugs are the real weapon of mass destruction

Around 700 Pakistanis die every day due to drug-related causes


Shahzad Anwar June 25, 2016
Around 700 Pakistanis die every day due to drug-related causes. PHOTO: AFP/FILE

ISLAMABAD: Drugs are the real weapon of mass destruction, says Cristina Von Sperling Afridi.

A couple of years back, Afridi’s only child, Karim Khan, died in a drug-related incident when he was just 19.

His death drove her to devote herself to the issue and create awareness among parents, educationists and the community at large to try to help prevent other families from having to feel her pain.  She founded Karim Khan Afridi Welfare Foundation (KKAWF) with a mission to disseminate knowledge on the adverse effects of drugs on individuals, families, and society.

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To break taboos that exists around drugs and to enable people to reach out for help, she said KKAWF is focusing on teenagers and aims to be a catalyst for the youth and the community they live in, by engaging federal and provincial governments to take up the task through better policies to manage and control drug production, prevention and use.

June 26 is marked as the International Day against Drug Abuse to raise awareness on the problems caused by the vice.

“The youth needs desperately to be engage and the KKAWF is looking to provide this trough their four Pillars which are, drug awareness, environment, sports and civic sense,” Afridi told The Express Tribune. She added that this was a battle that cannot be won alone. “It is necessary that mothers and families in general join hands because it could be anyone’s child, and drug users need help. With combined effort, they could be brought normalcy and become active member of society,” she said.

According to the Anti Narcotics Force, Pakistan has seven million drug addicts, three million of whom are concentrated in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa. Rehabilitation centres have been operating for decades, such as Dost Foundation in Peshawar, which has a capacity of 700 beds and also does work in prisons, schools and communities, but options are still very limited. In addition, rehab centres are functioning without set criteria or government supervision. Patients are sometimes mistreated, and stories of blackmailing of families are commonplace.

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Drug abuse is an epidemic, and according to a report published in Foreign Policy Magazine in August 2015, drugs kills an alarming 700 people per day in Pakistan, which would invariably rise if essential measures and durable initiatives are not taken.

The government lacks detailed research on drug use and information on prevalence and patterns among those aged 15 to 64. The last such survey was conducted by the United Nation Office on Drugs and Crimes (UNODC) in 2012 and was released in 2013. It included the use of plant-based drugs and medical prescription drugs, particularly cannabis, prescription opioids, tranquillisers, sedatives, and opiates such as heroin and opium. It found that drug use in Pakistan is highly differential by gender. The national population prevalence is a combination of very high levels of use of these substances among men, and generally low levels of use among women, offset by considerable misuse of prescription opioids, tranquillisers and sedatives among women.

Although Pakistan is a country with a large youth population, drug use is more common among those between the ages of 25 to 39 rather than the 15 to 24 bracket.

Of the 6.7 million users of any illicit substance estimated in 2012, around 4.25 million were considered drug dependent.

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In addition to drug use, there are the warning signs for a rapid expansion of the HIV epidemic. Survey results detected a high prevalence of HIV risk behaviours among intravenous drug users

Meanwhile, non-medical use of prescription drugs has always remained a challenge for health administrators. The National Ministry of Health Reforms and provincial Health Departments have never undertaken any scientific study or research to identify the gravity of non-medical use of prescription drugs and its consequences.

Published in The Express Tribune, June 26th, 2016.

COMMENTS (1)

umer | 8 years ago | Reply I think the youth needs desperately to be engaged with their Parents and Families to start with. It is the Parents that are the Pillars for our Children. Every thing starts at home civic sense, responsibility towards one an other and ultimately towards your country and society and neighborhood. Drug users need first help form their families as they are the closed to recognize the changes in the youth. How ever Families often are too busy or to engaged themselves and miss this important change and development in their child. It is mostly the so called upperclass kids that are neglected to get the attention and their lives are cut short. Drug problem's are much more among the poor and lower class and they hardly get any help or even attention. All this trust foundations focus on the rich and educated not on the majority drug users of the poor and less educated in our society. These kind of awareness should be written in URDU and brought to the attention of the less educated. I would imagine that our so called upper class is well enough educated to understand the development of our teenagers to keep a close eye on their behaviors and activities to avoid having their life's cut short.
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