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A drug craze sweeps Thailand
The Christian Science Monitor ^ | from the May 29, 2002 edition | By Dan Murphy | Special to The Christian Science Monitor

Posted on 05/31/2002 5:19:13 PM PDT by vannrox

from the May 29, 2002 edition - http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/0529/p06s01-woap.html

A drug craze sweeps Thailand

Methamphetamines from Burma continue to flood Thailand where use among all ages has skyrocketed.

By Dan Murphy | Special to The Christian Science Monitor

BANGKOK, THAILAND - Thai officials say last year was the worst year on record for the use of methamphetamine, a form of speed, called ya ba, or "crazy medicine" here. The Thai military is so alarmed that it has labeled the surge in users a threat to national security.

Almost all of the methamphetamine is produced in labs in Burma (Myanmar), where the drug lords who made the Golden Triangle synonymous with heroin have diversified into a product that's cheaper to produce, smuggle, and market than heroin, Thai police officials say.

Five years ago, just a trickle of methamphetamines were reaching Thailand. Today it's a torrent. About 70,000 Thais were convicted for methamphetamine-related offenses last year, up from 16,000 in 1997. Roughly 90 percent of all drug cases last year involved methamphetamines, and narcotics-control officials estimate that 5 percent of the population uses the drug.

Hope amid an epidemic

Still, drug experts such as Kanda Choaymeung find hope in the current situation. The psychologist and director of the Rajadamri drug treatment center here says Thailand is finally getting its arms around the problem. "This drug snuck up on us,'' she says. "We were so focused on treating heroin addiction, we weren't prepared when it hit us."

In the past few years, a government-backed television and radio blitz with movie and sports stars has slowly changed the drug's image from harmless to sinister. Thailand's police force has become more adept at catching users. And treatment centers have adapted to the special needs of their patients.

"People didn't think it was dangerous,'' says Chuanpit Choomwattana, a drug-policy expert at Thailand's Narcotics Control board. "With heroin, you can see the addiction, the damage to people almost right away. Ya ba is more subtle at the start.''

Mrs. Kanda, who has participated in the overhaul of Thai treatment centers, says statistics and anecdotal evidence show that the drug's spread seems to be slowing for the first time. "Use will soon plateau," she says. "There is a natural evolution of a drug epidemic, whether it's cocaine or heroin, and I think we're near the top."

Still, millions of poor, laboring Thais use ya ba. It can cost as little as $1 per pill, and the pills, which are usually eaten or ground up and smoked, give users a feeling of hyper alertness.

In the northern provinces, where proximity to Burma makes ya ba plentiful and cheap, alarming stories have surfaced of farmers paying seasonal laborers with ya ba. Students take it as a cheap replacement for the designer drug ecstasy at dance clubs.

A barrage from Burma

Thai authorities estimate that 800 million pills – 13 pills for every Thai citizen – are produced in Burma annually. The Thai police say production has grown increasingly sophisticated there, with some labs turning out 50 million pills a year.

"The numbers reflect an epidemic; this is our biggest drug-control problem,'' says Ms. Choomwattana.

In a new report on Thai drug use in 2001, the Thai Narcotics Control Board stressed the way the drug cuts through class distinctions and age groups: "Never before has any narcotic reached out to all levels of Thai society like methamphetamine does," the report stated.

"Tommy" knows how ya ba became Thailand's most widely abused drug. Sitting in a treatment center overlooking the boat traffic on a Bangkok canal, the soft-spoken young man with small hoop earrings expects "to be fighting cravings for the rest of my life."

When Tommy (not his real name)was 12, he was a classic underachiever. A bright, verbal kid with an English father and a Thai mother, he felt ignored by his busy parents and drifted into a dangerous group of friends that included a motorbike gang in his middle class Bangkok neighborhood. "I turned to my friends as a second family, for love and belonging," he says.

He first took methamphetamines out of curiosity, and at the start of his early teens he was taking two $3 pills a week.

"When I took it, it felt like all of my problems melted away," Tommy says.

He was soon taking 12 pills a day.

"I started out buying with my pocket money, but it became very expensive. I had to do something else," he says. "I started stealing in the end, car stereos, motorbikes, anything. I stole a diamond ring from my sister, money from my parents. My whole life was revolving around drugs."

He became a dealer, introducing other students to the drug. When Tommy was 16, his parents sent him to an Australian drug-treatment center. He guesses that he's been through 10 different treatment courses. His latest relapse was a month ago, after a year of keeping himself clean.

"It's psychologically tiring, fighting against thinking about it all the time,'' he says. "I wake up in the morning with them on my mind: What color are they, how strong are they these days, how much do they cost? Ya ba has taken so much from me."

"With methamphetamines, the psychological component to the addiction is even stronger than with heroin,'' says Kanda. "It can be overpowering."

Finding a cure

That's why early treatment methods, based on heroin treatment protocols, were thwarted. Specialists brought a user in, cleared the physical signs of the drug from their system, and taught them strategies to avoid relapsing.

But with ya ba, says Kanda, that almost always failed. They found that long-term – more than six months – psychological counseling followed by twice-weekly meetings at a 12-step program like Narcotics Anonymous was needed to help users with their problem.

A ya ba spread through Asia?

Though law-enforcement officials say the cheap pills now being produced in Burma are mostly hitting the Thai market, that could change. Countries such as Vietnam, Indonesia, and India have reservoir populations of users among truck drivers and manual laborers, just as Thailand did at the start of its epidemic.

If production continues to increase, and use in Thailand has in fact plateaued, drug merchants may seek to carve out new markets, just as Burmese heroin production began to reach into European, Australian, and US markets after the Vietnam war.

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TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: abuse; bangkok; burma; control; craze; drug; epidemic; heroin; methamphetamines; military; narcotics; police; smuggle; thailand; use
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1 posted on 05/31/2002 5:19:13 PM PDT by vannrox
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Comment #2 Removed by Moderator

To: ex con;vannrox;roscoe;dane;zon;headsonpikes;cultural jihad
Notice the legalize all drugs libertines are few and silent on this thread.
3 posted on 05/31/2002 5:38:24 PM PDT by VA Advogado
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To: VA Advogado
As are the 'shoot on sight all druggies' faction.

There is no doubt much that could be instructive in the Thai situation.

As I lack an intimate knowledge of Thai mores and political history, I prefer to discuss drugs in a North American context, with which I am familiar.

There's no point in quarrelling just for the sake of quarrelling, imo.

4 posted on 05/31/2002 5:52:40 PM PDT by headsonpikes
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To: VA Advogado
And I notice that the godly moralists who want all druggies locked up in concentration cam-I mean prisons- are not taking a stance here either. Different country, different circumstances.
5 posted on 05/31/2002 6:08:13 PM PDT by dheretic
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To: VA Advogado
What's to be said? -- People who want to fry their brains will find a way to do so, with one substance or another.

- With a free market on their 'drug' of choice, it would be cheap & legal, and nature could take its course. -- Shazzam! -- In a generation or three, -- no more 'problem' for big brother.
-- And no more job for all those little budding VA Advogado bureaucrats. - Now there's THE real problem! - To the bureaucratic, authoritarian mind.

6 posted on 05/31/2002 6:10:58 PM PDT by tpaine
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Comment #8 Removed by Moderator

Comment #9 Removed by Moderator

To: tpaine
People who want to fry their brains will find a way to do so, with one substance or another.

That's true. Here the drug of choice is silver aerosol paint which does a number on the brain quite fast. It helps though as far as keeping down the crime rate because once they fry their brains on that, they're too stupid to do much of anything. It's annoying though because all the hardware stores have the aerosol paints locked up.

10 posted on 05/31/2002 6:45:48 PM PDT by FITZ
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To: ex con
If you think the founding fathers wrote the constitution, set up our government and died to defend it so you and your brain addled pro-druggie friends can advocate that high schools smoke crack and stick needles in their arms, you are indeed as sick and dimented as Tpaine the the rest of his merry bunch.
11 posted on 05/31/2002 7:18:10 PM PDT by VA Advogado
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To: vannrox
There is increasing evidence that this flow of speed into Thailand is aided and abetted by the PRC (Myanmar's mentor state and partner in the Trans-Asian Axis). The Thai military are correct to view this as a threat to national security. This is one of the many ways the Axis are gradually undermining Thailand and setting it up to become an appeasing, Vichy-like, boot licking client of Beijing. In the meanwhile, illicit PRC funds help get ethnic Chinese and other pro-Beijing elements elected to both Parliament and local jursdictions. These plants continously steer Bangkok away from Washington and toward Beijing. It's all part of a plan that does not bode well for the West.
12 posted on 05/31/2002 7:38:57 PM PDT by GOP_1900AD
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Comment #13 Removed by Moderator

To: vannrox
A drug problem in Thailand? Im shocked!! Ever heard of a ThaiStick? Last time I was there I didnt notice anyone having a hard time buying recreational drugs in the open. Then you have the Burmese slipping their goods across the border (with the payoff of a Thai officer)...Im just stunned.../sarcasm
14 posted on 05/31/2002 7:56:17 PM PDT by Enemy Of The State
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To: VA Advogado
If you think that they fought a war for independence against an abusive empire so that people like you could create a perpetual state of war within the society as an excuse to piss all over the Constitution they wrote, you too are mistaken. This country was not founded so that self-righteous do-gooders like you could destroy it in the name of "decency."
15 posted on 05/31/2002 8:03:31 PM PDT by dheretic
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To: Enemy Of The State
Watch that one sop in Chiang Mai/Rai is for the dealer to do the rounds daytime,then night time to supplement his income go around with the police identifying the farangs(foreigners)he sold it to,if your lucky 5-10000 baht will get you out of it,if not and its a sting Thai prison aint a good thing,only place I indulged in a little was the deep south,the cop was the islands barmaids(expat) boyfriend,(and quite a character-maa fee ahh)
16 posted on 05/31/2002 8:04:53 PM PDT by Governor StrangeReno
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To: dheretic
You are on the fringe. There is no room in normal society for you pro druggers.
17 posted on 05/31/2002 9:15:24 PM PDT by VA Advogado
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Comment #18 Removed by Moderator

To: ex con
What is driving demand in Thailand? Supply. Supply. Supply.
19 posted on 05/31/2002 9:35:43 PM PDT by let freedom sing
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Comment #20 Removed by Moderator


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