The trade is transformative, and the annual UN World Drug Report details how states become consumers as a result of being transit countries. Today Karachi is the largest in-country transit hub for drugs and there is a need to allocate more resources, for Pakistan agencies to work even more closely than they already do with the UNODC and expand technical resources. This is a problem ‘in process’ and the UNODC warning must be heeded if we are not to fall into the trap of dependency. It is anecdotally reported that recreational drug use among young people, particularly in the expanding middle class, is widespread. There is little empirical evidence of the drug-using profile nationally. The UNODC report can also be seen as an opportunity rather than as just a threat. It is not too late to make the necessary interventions that can head off a deadly dependency. Political commitment will drive the quality or otherwise of the response to the UNODC warning, and the government would do well to heed wise advice.
Published in The Express Tribune, August 27th, 2016.
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