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Oppression Won't Cure Russia's Drug Addiction The Moscow Times

neversickanymore

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Oppression Won't Cure Russia's Drug Addiction
Oct. 13 2014

In the past month, at least 800 Russians have been poisoned after using synthetic marijuana and other smoking blends known collectively as "spice." At least 25 people died.

Spice represents a new kind of drug threat in which the substance's synthesis is unlimited. No government in the world is able to react swiftly enough to prevent new types of designer drugs from hitting the market disguised as legal smoking blends, bath salts or plant food.

The arrival of new types of synthetic drugs, whose chemical formulas can be swiftly tweaked in order for the substance to remain technically legal, suggests that rather than focusing on the supply of drugs in Russia, it would be more expedient to work at decreasing demand in order to alleviate the situation.

There are 8 million drug users in Russia, half of whom are officially classified as addicts. These people spend at least 1.5 trillion rubles ($37 billion) on drugs including heroin, cocaine, marijuana and spice every year, Federal Drug Control Service head Viktor Ivanov told Ekho Moskvy radio last week. This is equivalent to the annual tax revenues of Moscow, a city of 12 million. Eighty percent of all deaths of Russians aged 18 to 34 are caused by drugs, Ivanov said.

At present, the Russian government is desperately trying to crush the drug market with force. At the same time, there is not a single government program to work with demand. Policymakers need to see drug use in a holistic way, to understand that social ills directly correspond to its proliferation. Russians must be able to resolve difficulties without resorting to repressing them with drugs. Drugs must become irrelevant in Russia.

Simplistic "just say no" anti-drug policies need to disappear from the public agenda. Numerous anti-drug marathons and other campaigns have the opposite effect to that intended and end up promoting the substances, experts say. Practicing a sport, contrary to the official line, is not in fact guaranteed to prevent or cure drug addiction. At the same time, drug users should no longer be marginalized. Non-governmental organizations that deal with drugs must be supported rather than vilified, and allowed to work at schools to mediate violence among students with the ultimate aim of reducing and preventing drug use.

Policymakers must realize that taking drugs or drinking alcohol is often simply the most obvious and immediate reaction to social problems that people have to cope with from childhood: abuse, social anxiety and disorientation, a lack of societal consensus on values and lack of meritocracy, among many others.

The spread of drug use is a barometer of the problems facing Russia and its society at any given moment. Furthermore, experts say the level of violence in a society directly corresponds to the spread of drugs.

Ivanov's agency is currently lobbying hard for the authority to ban synthetic drugs unilaterally. Another bill currently being discussed by the State Duma would make drug addiction a criminal offense punishable by up to six months in prison. Currently, the maximum penalty for drug use is up to 15 days in detention, and more usually it is punished with a fine.

Russia already convicts more people for drug-related crimes than India and China combined. In the past five years, 1.2 million Russians have been charged with drug-related offenses. Yet in addition to 120 departments in hospitals, there are only three separate drug rehabilitation centers across Russia right now. Out of 4 million drug addicts, 300 are currently undergoing treatment in these facilities, according to Ivanov.

At the same time, about 16,000 drug addicts are currently being treated in some 500 non-governmental centers, according to the drug control agency. Most of these centers suffer from a lack of funding and sometimes even electricity. Some of the most successful and famous ones, such as Yevgeny Roizman's City Without Drugs in Yekaterinburg, are subject to persistent raids by local government officials.

Russia's drug problem clearly demonstrates that the country cannot solve its ills by simply punishing users. There may be no silver bullet for the drug problem, but the scale of its spread in Russia makes the fight against it a strategic imperative for the country's future.

continued here http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/oppression-won-t-cure-russia-s-drug-addiction/509379.html
 
Russia is such an insane joke. They've taught history so poorly, people actually believe if they ramp up the brutal repression, things will get better, "just like they used to be."

The one comment by "Ivan" under the article is funny though. Don't look left (to the U.S.) and imprison half the population... Not sure if ironic..
 
Russia is such an insane joke. They've taught history so poorly, people actually believe if they ramp up the brutal repression, things will get better, "just like they used to be."

The one comment by "Ivan" under the article is funny though. Don't look left (to the U.S.) and imprison half the population... Not sure if ironic..

I live in Russia/ go to university there. Trust me when I tell you, when I get an itch to use, nothing can stop me. I've gotten itches to use in Russian, Moscow more specifically, and never ever ever found what I was looking for (opiates/ hallucinogenics). I came across some hash, ecstasy, cocaine, and that was IT.....and it was few and far between to say it lightly....... and I've copped drugs all across the USA and Europe... I am a true piece of shit....

What I found out was that people were mostly scared to use drugs. You get caught with an x pill in Russia, and you better believe you're going to pay hard time for it. The police and Putin in specific, do not fuck around with drugs. This scares people to not use....not everyone of course, but a significant portion of the population.

Think about it... would you risk a little fine for a baggie of pot here in America? Yea.....

Would you risk a few years in Siberia for that same bag of pot in Russia? ....... it's not worth it.

I am not totally for or against the strict drug laws in Russia.... I see good in them, but I also see the negative of course.
 
In Soviet russia.....lol

I wonder what the coke scene in Russia is like. I'd imagine that only the wealthy use it and can afford it
Since they have coke I'd imagine they would have crack as well. I know dope is expensive in a majority of places so that's why they do the whole kitchen chemistry thing to make stronger opis like desomorphine.

I know I wouldn't want to end up in a gulag doing hard labor for a bag of weed or a small amount of whatever.
 
I live in Russia/ go to university there. Trust me when I tell you, when I get an itch to use, nothing can stop me. I've gotten itches to use in Russian, Moscow more specifically, and never ever ever found what I was looking for (opiates/ hallucinogenics). I came across some hash, ecstasy, cocaine, and that was IT.....and it was few and far between to say it lightly....... and I've copped drugs all across the USA and Europe... I am a true piece of shit....

Based on what I've been told by relatives who reside there, heroin is very easy to find, but far too expensive for most Russians who prefer the habitual consumption of µ-opioid agonists instead of vodka.

Understandably, Red Square may not be the best area to make it known you are in the market for such a drug. On the other hand, vodka should be no problem.

I'm curious as to why you feel like you are a true piece of shit?

What I found out was that people were mostly scared to use drugs. You get caught with an x pill in Russia, and you better believe you're going to pay hard time for it. The police and Putin in specific, do not fuck around with drugs. This scares people to not use....not everyone of course, but a significant portion of the population.

Well, I'm sure that after what's been happening with respect to the rampant use of 'Krokodil,' that many people would quickly think of that when seeing a mind altering substance in the form of a powder in a shady-looking baggie.

Also, as far as I know, Methadone Clinics continue to be illegal in Russia (and now in Crimea too), which is exceptionally cruel, because I can guarantee you that countless 'Krokodil' addicts would switch to Methadone if they could.

Putin should make himself physically dependent to a large dosage of diacetylmorphine, or an Rx narcotic which I'm sure he would have no problems acquiring for no reason. And then he should try to stop cold turkey after a year, and I guarantee that Methadone Clinics will open up across the nation soon afterwards.

It's sad and pathetic that the only way to get a politician to listen is to have him or her personally be affected by the issue in question. And that's definitely not limited to Russia.

Think about it... would you risk a little fine for a baggie of pot here in America? Yea.....

As much as I would want to, I would never risk breaking drug laws in a foreign country. I'd rather wait it out until I get home and then break the law.

Would you risk a few years in Siberia for that same bag of pot in Russia? ....... it's not worth it.

Hell no. Based on what I've seen via video shared with me by relatives, I'd never take that chance.

I am not totally for or against the strict drug laws in Russia.... I see good in them, but I also see the negative of course.

It's too bad others in Duma don't seem to see things the way you do.
 
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