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Kabul buy Heroin
Now, out of a population of 35 million, more than a million are addicted to drugs - proportionately the highest figure in the world. Right in the heart of Kabul, on the stony banks of the Kabul River, drug addicts gather to buy and use heroin. It's a place of misery and degradation. In broad daylight about a dozen men and teenage boys sit huddled in pairs smoking and injecting. Among them are some educated people - a doctor, an engineer and an interpreter. Tariq Sulaiman, from Najat, a local addiction charity, comes here regularly to try to persuade addicts to get treatment. At the age of 18, Jawid, originally from Badakhshan in the north of Afghanistan, has already been hooked on heroin for 10 years. His uncle introduced him to drugs when he was a small child, to make him work harder on the land. Everyone hates me. I should have been at school at this age, but I am a junkie,' he says. His father is dead. His disabled mother worries about her son constantly. All she wants from life is for him to get clean, but she begs on the streets to pay for his daily dose to prevent him stealing. This is the fate of the most hardcore addicts, whose fires can be seen at night. Police regularly beat and disperse them, and sometimes throw them in the river. Jawid: ''I came here to quit, to become a nice person''. The reasons why so many Afghans are turning to drugs are complex. It's clear that decades of violence have played a part. Many of those who fled during the violence of the last 30 years took refuge in Iran and Pakistan, where addiction rates have long been high. They're now returning and bringing their drug problems with them, officials say. He says he takes drugs 'to be calm and to relax' - but that he would prefer to be dead than a junkie, as he now is. Another factor is the increasing availability of heroin, which over the last decade has begun to be refined from raw opium in Afghanistan itself. To buy heroin in Kabul is 'as easy as buying yourself something to eat', addicts say. When foreign troops arrived in Afghanistan in , one of their goals was to stem drug production. Instead, they have concentrated on fighting insurgents, and have often been accused of turning a blind eye to the poppy fields. Opium has been around in Afghanistan for centuries, used as a kind of medical cure-all. In a hospital in the northern city of Mazar-e Sharif, I met an Afghan woman, Fatima, who had taken opium while suffering from bleeding after childbirth, because it was cheaper than going to a doctor. Then she gave it to her baby to stop her coughing during breastfeeding - and now both are addicted. While Fatima and her baby are getting treatment at a public hospital, few Afghan addicts get any help at all. All told, the health ministry runs 95 addiction treatment centres around the country, with enough bed space for 2, people. Jawid alone consumes heroin worth about three times that every day. The treatment consists of going 'cold turkey' for 72 hours. The participants began by getting their heads shaved. After one day, Jawid was in pain, but he could deal with it. Then, on the second night, he started shouting and crying and banging his head against a wall. When I met him on the street, he denied that he was back on heroin, but his glazed eyes and rambling speech told a different story. As he disappeared into the snowy twilight, his chances of kicking his habit seemed bleak. And as Afghanistan faces so many problems on so many fronts, its chances of winning the wider war on drugs seem equally uncertain. You can follow the Magazine on Twitter , external and on Facebook , external. By Tahir Qadiry. This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.
Photos: Despair and poverty fuel drug use in Afghanistan
Kabul buy Heroin
Drug use has been driven by persistent poverty and decades of war that left few families unscarred. Families once able to get by found their sources of income cut off, leaving many barely able to afford food. Millions have joined the ranks of the impoverished. Drug users can be found around the capital, Kabul, living in parks and sewage drains, under bridges and on open hillsides. A survey by the United Nations estimated that up to 2. Seven years later, the number is not known, but it is believed to have only increased, according to Dr Zalmel, the head of the Drug Demand Reduction Department, who like many Afghans, uses only one name. The Taliban has launched an aggressive campaign to eradicate poppy cultivation. Earlier this summer, Taliban fighters stormed two areas frequented by drug users, one on the hillside and another under a bridge. They collected about 1, people, officials said. It is the largest of several treatment camps around Kabul. There, the residents were shaved and kept in a barracks for 45 days. They receive no treatment or medication as they go through withdrawal. The camp barely has enough money to feed those who live there. Published On 25 Jul 25 Jul Such camps do little to treat addiction. A week after the raids, both locations were once again full of hundreds of people using drugs.
Kabul buy Heroin
Afghanistan, the drug addiction capital
Kabul buy Heroin
Kabul buy Heroin
Afghanistan, the drug addiction capital
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Kabul buy Heroin
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