High
school students are increasingly using methamphetamines and other
stimulants to relax or help them study, according to the UN.
A
spike in trafficking of amphetamine-type stimulants (ATS) across the
borders with Thailand and Laos over the past two years has gone
hand-in-hand with a rise in drug use in schools near the trafficking
routes.
“Over two-thirds of people who use drugs are under the age of 25. The vast majority of these are ATS users,” Clay Nayton, a drug treatment officer with the UN Office on Drugs and Crime in Cambodia (UNODC), said last week.
“We have had reports from government counterparts that there has been a fairly significant increase over the last 24 months in secondary schools, particularly in provinces along the border of neighbouring countries.”
Southeast Asia
has in the past decade seen a dramatic rise in the production and use
of ATS, which has overtaken heroin as the product of choice for
trafficking syndicates in the Golden Triangle – the storied region where Myanmar, Laos, Thailand and China’s Yunnan province meet.
While
Myanmar remains the regional hub for ATS production, the UNODC in
recent years has recorded a surge in manufacturing and export of ATS
from labs in Cambodia by drug-trafficking groups predominantly from
China and Taiwan.
“In Battambang, ATS use amongst high school
students] seems to be a bit more of a phenomenon than in Banteay
Meanchey. In Battambang, there’s also been a huge spike in ice,” Nayton
said, referring to the crystalline form of meth.
“There has been an increase in trafficking of ATS and there’s definitely a correlation between the two,” he added.
Unlike
in some neighbouring countries, the rise in the use of the drug does
not seem to have preceded a corresponding increase in other forms of
criminal activity.
“It’s interesting. It’s not similar to
Thailand, also because of the motivating factors behind it,” Nayton
said. “The students are not really the type of people that are engaged
in other forms of crime. We’re not really sure of the motivations, but
more likely [they are] recreational users.”
“Some of the [UNODC]
outreach staff have been operating in schools . . . but because it’s
relatively new, we haven’t managed to talk to the students yet.”
Ngy Seth, director of the Batambang provincial education department,
said: “I heard [about the reports] and I went down to some schools to
ask school directors and teachers about this, but [the schools] did not
have [a problem].
“There are not students using drugs in school or class, but we do not know if they used in another place.”
The
UNODC’s Nayton, however, said that UNODC outreach staff had been
operating in schools in the provinces and had discovered evidence to
back up the reports, including drug dealers operating in school yards.
Meas
Sovann, director of Drug Addict Relief Association of Cambodia (DARA),
said about half of the recovering addicts in the DARA centre in Phnom Penh are students.
“Most
of them [drug users] are young people . . . drug users increased in the
provinces near the border and they mostly use methamphetamine,” he
said.
Kao Khon Dara, deputy chairman of the National Authority for Combating Drugs, declined to comment.
Source: phnompenhpost
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