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Iraqis turn to drugs to escape violence

E-llusion

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Nov 3, 2002
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Iraqis turn to drugs to escape violence

By SINAN SALAHEDDIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Tamam Abdul-Kadhim started taking a sedative about two years ago to calm his nerves after he witnessed a bombing in central Baghdad. Soon he was addicted.

The 35-year-old is one of a growing number of Iraqis turning to drugs to help them cope with the daily violence and other problems that have become part of their lives.

"I saw for the first time in my life brains and body parts scattered after a bombing in central Baghdad," he said. "I was not able to think properly or sleep because the images from that massacre were stuck in my mind so that I relied on this medicine."

He turned to the Ibn Rushid psychiatric hospital to help him overcome his problems, going twice a week for treatment consultations.

Health officials say that in a shift from Saddam Hussein's ousted regime, the abuse of prescription and illegal drugs has become more widespread than alcoholism.

"Illegal narcotics are available everywhere in Iraq and anyone can get products containing amphetamines and codeine from any pharmacy or sidewalk throughout Iraq," said Ibn Rushid's director, Dr. Shaalan Joda al-Abod.



"While getting alcohol became harder due to ongoing harassment and threats by extremists against the liquor shops and factories as all bars and night clubs are closed," he added.

In prewar Iraq, alcoholism was the main problem facing 80 percent of patients being treated for addiction at the hospital, while 20 percent suffered from drug abuse, al-Abod said. But over the past three years, drug abuse accounts for 70 percent of the cases, while alcoholism decreased to 30 percent, he said.

Al-Abod, whose hospital is the only medical facility in the country that treats drug addicts who also have exhibited psychological problems, said his hospital receives about 30 cases of drug abuse monthly and 90 percent of the patients are from 18 to 25 years old.

Most live in Baghdad's poor suburbs and psychological analyses in the center find violence and poverty to be the main causes of addiction.

In an attempt to combat the phenomenon, awareness campaigns are being developed by the health ministry's drug-prevention department as the United Nations has dedicated US$3.2 million to combat drug abuse in Iraq.

But officials blamed the general lack of security in the country for their inability to reach more abusers as they often encounter difficulties reaching more remote areas.

"We can't send our teams to all parts of Iraq, particularly the outskirts of urban areas where addiction is high," Health Ministry spokesman Qassim Allawi said. "Our work is limited to holding one or two conferences a year, publishing posters and sometimes TV advertisements."

Ahmed Abdul-Jabar Mizaal, a 28-year-old Iraqi man with a degree in Arabic literature, turned to drugs as a way to escape reality.

"With only these tablets I can go on," he said, sitting cross-legged next to the wooden stall where he sells cigarettes on a Baghdad street.

Abusers have invented their own lingo for the drugs, such as "the bloody" for Valium, "the cross" for the epilepsy drug Tegretol, and "the eyebrow" for methadone, the opiate that's medically prescribed for treating heroin addiction but also can be abused.

Eman Awadh, a 38-year-old math teacher at an elementary school who suffered from a year of addiction to the anti-anxiety drug Artane after she escaped a kidnapping attempt, just finished a five-month treatment program at the hospital and was ready to start her life again.

"I miss my lessons and my students," Awadh said, bursting into tears as she was supported by her mother and sister who picked her up from the hospital. "Sometimes I thought about committing suicide to get rid of my pain."

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1107AP_Iraq_Drug_Abuse.html
 
Artane - trihexyphenidyl - What is this? I look it up and it says it is an 'antiparkinson agent of the antimuscarinic class of agents'. I can't find anything saying its an 'anti-anxiety' drug... Just that is very unpleasant and in the same family of drugs as datura.
 
It must be bad enough being in a war zone with an unknown enermy, but being an addict in a war zone, jesus! :\

I imagine being fed speed by the army/air force is pretty fucking awful too! :\
 
No shit, i'd be doped to all fuck too if I was getting shot at and bombed. At least if you get shot or catch some schrapnel in your spine it won't hurt that bad.
 
jeez, I think ope's and benzos should be legal in 3rd world countries they should be able to be happy or at least neutral some of the time. Im not being sarcastic at all, Alot of people over there would lead much more productive lives if they were easy to get. They might already be legal, Im just stating my opinion.
 
cainnabelspawn said:
Artane - trihexyphenidyl - What is this? I look it up and it says it is an 'antiparkinson agent of the antimuscarinic class of agents'. I can't find anything saying its an 'anti-anxiety' drug... Just that is very unpleasant and in the same family of drugs as datura.


Yep, used to combat side effects of some anti-psychotic meds. Cogentin
is another. Never heard of anybody being addicted to Artane. That's
fucked up.
 
i read somewhere that artane was recreational, but i don't know its effects on anxiety.

anyway, i feel bad for anyone who chooses "the cross" (ie, tegretol) of all the various options.

all joking aside, it is a terrible situation these people are in.
 
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