Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
India

Misuse of pharmaceutical drugs rising in India: UN official

Darpan News Desk IANS, 24 Jul, 2014 08:46 AM
    After cannabis and heroin, the misuse of pharmaceutical drugs is rising among subcontinental drug users because of their easy availability at cheap rates and this is a cause for concern, a top UN official has said.
     
    "Cannabis is easily available in India, Nepal and Bangladesh. Heroin is also available at cheaper rates, but there are also pharmaceutical drugs which are very cheap in this region and is a serious problem," Cristina Albertine, the South Asia representative of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), told IANS in an interview.
     
    Recalling one of her visits to a drug rehabilitation centre in Kolkata, Albertine said: "I had gone to a Kolkata rehabilitation centre where all the clients were rickshaw pullers who injected heroin to cope up with the life.
     
    "The drugs are very cheap in the region. As you (India) are very close to Afghanistan and Myanmar, heroin is very cheap there. I guess that the regions close to productive sites get heroin at very cheap rates," Albertine said in the interaction at the UNODC India office here.
     
    According to Albertine, misuse of pharmaceutical drugs poses a serious problem for India and South Asian countries because of their availability at low prices.
     
    "You don't need too much financial security to be able to afford it," she said. Codeine-based cough syrups, diazepam and proxyvon are some of the pharmaceutical drugs that are quite popular among addicts.
     
    "Yaba pills are very famous in Bangladesh and Myanmar," Albertine added.
     
    She said once hooked on to drugs, it is very difficult to kick the habit. "India, Nepal and Bangladesh cultivate cannabis. Misuse of synthetic and pharmaceutical drugs is a big concern as they are produced by pharmaceutical companies in India and Bangladesh," Albertine said.
     
    Talking about the sources and routes of drugs, Albertine said: "Opiate and heroin basically come from Afghanistan. Then it comes through Pakistan to India."
     
    "You also have some influx from Myanmar into northeast (India). Then you have the synthetic drug which comes from Southeast Asia and often through Myanmar and Bangladesh."
     
    The UNODC has no exact figure of drug addicts in India since the Indian government has not maintained such records since 2001, Albertine said.
     
    "We don't have any national survey. India had done a survey in 2001, which was published in 2004," Albertine said.
     
    India has over 70 million drug addicts, according to a survey conducted by the Social Justice and Empowerment Ministry and UNODC.
     
    Albertine said Bangladesh and Sri Lanka have also not conducted drug surveys, though Nepal did so a while ago.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Indian student in UAE readies for NASA launch of experiments

    Indian student in UAE readies for NASA launch of experiments
    The experiments of an eleven-year-old Indian student in the UAE would be launched into space under a NASA programme, a media report said.

    Indian student in UAE readies for NASA launch of experiments

    Modinomics will face 'socialist' roadblock

    Modinomics will face 'socialist' roadblock
    As Narendra Modi resumes the task of continuing the economic reforms even if it means administering "bitter medicine", the first dose of which was given on Friday, one might have expected the Congress to offer him wholehearted support.

    Modinomics will face 'socialist' roadblock

    Did not seek to impose Hindi, says Modi government

    Did not seek to impose Hindi, says Modi government
    Amid fire from various political parties and chief ministers for imposing the use of Hindi in non-Hindi speaking states, the union home ministry Friday said it "didn't seek to impose communication in Hindi on states which do not speak the language".

    Did not seek to impose Hindi, says Modi government

    Government set to make Temporary Foreign Worker program more transparent

    Government set to make Temporary Foreign Worker program more transparent
    Employment Minister Jason Kenney and Immigration Minister Chris Alexander are set to reveal reforms to the Temporary Foreign Worker Program Friday. This will include making public the names of employers that have been given the green light to hire temporary foreign workers, reports the CBC.

    Government set to make Temporary Foreign Worker program more transparent

    Abducted Indian escapes, India 'knocking on all doors'

    Abducted Indian escapes, India 'knocking on all doors'
    India said Friday it was "knocking on all doors" and not just in Iraq to free the Indian workers abducted there, as one of them escaped from the custody of suspected Sunni insurgents.

    Abducted Indian escapes, India 'knocking on all doors'

    Abducted Indians in Iraq safe, efforts on to free them

    Abducted Indians in Iraq safe, efforts on to free them
    India Thursday said the 40 Indian workers abducted in strife-torn Iraq are safe and told their distraught families that the "very best" efforts are going on to have them freed.

    Abducted Indians in Iraq safe, efforts on to free them