Monday, April 23, 2012

80% of children in survey drink

Nearly 80% of a group of surveyed Gauteng high school pupils regularly consume alcohol, according to findings released by the Bureau for Market Research (BMR) on Sunday.

Of the 4 346 pupils in Grade 8 to Grade 12 who were quizzed, 66.6% said they had been drunk, 44.8% had done "binge drinking" and 79.4% regularly consumed alcohol, according to the survey by the bureau, which is part of Unisa.

According to Antoinette Basson in the BMR's youth research unit (YRU), the study was motivated by the need for contemporary information on the subject, which she said placed an enormous burden on South African society.

"The YRU research study identified that learners often find themselves in an environment where illicit drugs and alcohol are easily accessible and used by their peers, which make resistance very difficult," the BMR said.

Pupils said they were using the substances for stress relief and recreation.

Almost three in every 10 pupils - 26.9% - who participated in the study said they use illicit drugs, with dagga the most popular. A total of 95.4% of the drug users said they used it.

Cigarette smoking and Hubbly bubblies were becoming more popular among secondary school pupils, particularly girls, and were not associated with the negative consequences of tobacco smoking.

More than half of the pupils surveyed (53.8%) said they trust their parents for advice on drug use and alcohol consumption (from News24)

I can't say I am surprised by the results which this research has revealed. The smart kids.... all 26.9% of them (less 5%) chose the safer option than alcohol. These kids should be commended for their intelligence, yet I do not believe in having children do cannabis. Cannabis should be age restricted, except for medical treatment. Alcohol is now so freely available that it seems that all kids are drinking!? The world's largest drug dealer, SAB Miller, must be proud!

Friday, April 13, 2012

Drug warrant for social MEC

A warrant for the arrest of a senior Western Cape government official was authorised on Friday when he failed to appear in court on a charge of possession of the drug tik.

Cape Town magistrate Nasha Banwari directed the warrant be stayed until July 3, when David McNamara, 48, the provincial community development director, was scheduled to make his eighth court appearance.

TIK Lolly
His lawyer William Booth told the court McNamara was due for orthopaedic surgery on Saturday, and that the defence had informed the prosecuting authorities earlier in the week that circumstances prevented McNamara's appearance on Friday.

Banwari said the warrant would be executed if McNamara failed to appear in court again on July 3.

McNamara, of Waterloo Road, Wynberg, was arrested on June 28

last year, in the Cape Town CBD, allegedly in possession of a broken bottle neck, used as a pipe to inhale the fumes of burning the drug tik (crystal methamphetamine), and seven plastic bags containing tik residue.

The magistrate declared his R500 bail provisionally forfeited to the State, and said it would be finally forfeited if McNamara failed to attend the July 3 proceedings.

News of McNamara's arrest and court appearances only surfaced in February, when provincial community development MEC, Albert Fritz, announced that McNamara had been placed on immediate leave, pending internal proceedings.

The department's special programmes unit, involved in combating drug abuse, was part of McNamara's portfolio. - Sapa