
The use of illicit drugs along with their accessibility and the impact they have on young adults continue to be a worrying problem which authorities worldwide are struggling to combat and bring under control.
The Central Drug Authority (CDA) said different tactics and avenues needed to be explored to fight the usage and distribution of drugs.
CDA deputy chairman David Bayever said there was no single approach to fighting the problem such as criminalising or decriminalising substance usage as drug manufacturers were always one step ahead of authorities. There needed to be a plan to tackle and ensure market, supply and farm reduction. (There is. It is called the National Drug Master Plan and it has failed us twice already.)

The UN Office on Drugs and Crime southern Africa regional representative, Mandiaye Niang, painted a grim picture of how the production of opium had increased in Afghanistan. It is the world’s biggest opium producer while the rest of the world is faced with rising levels of synthetic drug production.
“Cannabis (dagga) remains the world’s most used illicit herb. It has grown and is trafficked in almost every country in the world,” he said. What he didn't say was WHY? WHY is it so popular? Is it because people have learned that it is SAFE?
The report, said cannabis remained the most widely used illicit substance globally, with an estimated an

Overall, annual prevalence of cannabis use remained stable in 2010 (2.8 percent to 4.5 percent of the adult population in 2009).
The highest prevalence of cannabis use is being reported in Oceania (essentially Australia and New Zealand) at 9.1 percent to 14.6 percent, followed by North America (10.8 percent), western and central Europe (7.0 percent) and west and central Africa (5.2 percent to 13.5 percent).
In 2010, experts from many countries in west and central Africa, southern Africa, south Asia and central Asia reported a perceived increase in cannabis use. Niang added that Africa and Asia were now the new emerging heroin markets and there had also been an increase in SA.

Bayever admitted that their organisation had realised how problematic heroin was becoming in the country. “Heroin is becoming a bigger problem. Drug traffickers have realised that there is a demand for it and they are exploiting that.” (from IOL)

2 comments:
well the CDA is going all out there to reduce the amount of farms instead of harm...
they are doomed to fail - they don't even know what they are doing / saying / looking for.
alternative world drug report
Post a Comment