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Indonesia's drug fight pushes prison AIDS explosion

phr

Ex-Bluelighter
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May 25, 2004
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Indonesia's drug fight pushes prison AIDS explosion
Aubrey Belford
AFP
8.3.09



JAKARTA — Their tattooed skin hanging loosely from hollowed-out limbs, the young men in the clinic at the edge of Jakarta's Cipinang Narcotic Prison lie limply across black vinyl beds.

The half-dozen inmates are in the advanced stages of HIV/AIDS, and are part of a crisis that has seen the disease sweep through Indonesia's overcrowded, squalid and corrupt prisons.

The root of the problem, activists say, is a war on drugs that treats injecting users -- many of them already HIV positive -- with the same harsh punishments as dealers, flooding jails where opportunities to get drugs and spread the disease are plentiful.

"People who are selling drugs, buying drugs, bringing drugs, abusing drugs, whatever, are being locked in the same place in the same situation -- no treatment, no nothing," said Baby Jim Aditya, the head of Partisan, a non-governmental organisation dealing with public health.

A 27-year-old, HIV-positive former heroin addict who goes by the nickname Black is a recently released veteran of that system.

Arrested by an enraged crowd in 2007 as he attempted to shoot up with a friend in a quiet corner of a Jakarta market, Black spent 20 months in jail for possession of one-tenth of a gram of low-grade heroin, or "putaw".

While in police detention, his friend, Rahman, died after being cut off from access to anti-retroviral medication and going through heroin withdrawal. Black then graduated to Jakarta's Salemba prison.

"When I was still inside, there were lots of drugs, all sorts," Black said.

Prison gangs would sell drugs such as marijuana, crystal methamphetamine and heroin with the connivance of guards, for very little difference in price compared to the outside world, he said.

A small packet of heroin that would cost 40,000 rupiah (four dollars) on the outside costs 50-60,000 rupiah in Salemba, and is usually better quality, he said.

Needles to shoot up are also readily available. A "used" needle costs 2,000 rupiah per shot, while a "new" needle -- which does not necessarily mean it is sterile, but just that it is not yet blunt -- is more expensive.

"For a putaw user, it's like that. They use it once, twice and it's still sharp so they see it as new," Black said.

"(The dealers usually) have a stock of needles, let's say 15. When they open it, 15 people will line up. When they finish, others will use them."

In numbers, the HIV/AIDS crisis in Indonesia's prisons is striking. Roughly a third of the 254 prison deaths recorded in May this year were due to HIV/AIDS, according to official statistics.

Nearly 12,000 people are locked up in Jakarta prisons built to house just 5,056 inmates. Almost 6,900 inmates -- more than the entire Jakarta prisons system's official capacity -- are in for drug crimes.

The number of inmates infected with HIV/AIDS is imprecise, but Partisan's Aditya reckons somewhere between a quarter and 40 percent of prisoners locked up on drug-related crimes are HIV positive, and most of them are unaware of their status.

The authorities at Cipinang Narcotic -- capacity 1,084, real population 2,297 -- estimate 20 to 30 percent of their inmates are infected.

Those arguing for drug law reform in Indonesia say it should not be like this.

A war on drugs spearheaded by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and an impending bill introducing heavy minimum sentences are part of a push that has seen prisons overflow, Atma Jaya University law lecturer Asmin Fransiska said.

"The policy on drugs is much harsher right now than 10 years ago. (Former president) Abdurrahman Wahid's drug user policy put it as a social issue but since Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, drugs have been put on the level of security," Fransiska said.

Although in theory the law allows for light sentences and rehabilitation for addicts, in practice authorities opt for a tough line, she said.

"This has become a huge problem, because we know you can't put a drug addict in prison and everything will be alright."

While underfunded prison authorities are attempting to test and treat infected inmates, so-called "harm reduction" treatments to stop the spread of the disease inside are all but taboo, Aditya said.

"If we promote clean needles they will point at our face: 'you're promoting injecting drugs'. If you're promoting safe sex it means you're promoting free sex," she said.

The head of Indonesia's prison system, Untung Sugiyono, said the data showed the problem was not transmission inside prisons, but the fact that infected drug users were entering custody and promptly succumbing to the disease amid squalid conditions.

"A person comes in and before they know it, in one to six months, they get sick and die," he said.

"It's too extreme to say there are still a lot of drugs (in prisons). I don't want to skim over it if there are any, but it is relatively small."

Despite the grimness of its infirmary ward, Cipinang Narcotic is the closest thing Indonesia has to a model prison when it comes to dealing with HIV/AIDS and drug addiction.

The prison conducts basic tests on all inmates for HIV, deals out anti-retroviral drugs and has a methadone programme.

But the prison's chief, Ibnu Chauldun, believes the effectiveness of all this has been undermined by a dysfunctional system that has overwhelmed his jail with users who should not be there.

"What are they the victims of? They are the victims of drugs. They have to be rehabilitated, not jailed," Chauldun said.

"You think we have a rehabilitation centre? We don't have one. We're not a rehabilitation centre. We're an institute for reforming criminals."

Link!
 
Seriously fucked up shit. Imagine living out your dying days with AIDs in one of those prisons.
 
The US has a similar policy, US prisons aren't much different. We don't have needle exchanges, MMT/BMT, or basic treatment services to addicts in prison. We hand out ARV's too, and let people whither away and die in a concrete cage.

Prison gangs bribing gaurds and running drug smuggling operations is not only nothing new, it's nothing out of the ordinary. Heroin is probably easier to get in a maximum security prison than it is to get on the street. Was it Pelican Bay where 3/4 of the prison population turned up positive for opiates when a prison wide UA was conducted? What a farce.

And if you're middle-class, your family can spend its retirement and savings accounts on a trip to one of those $60,000 retreats where you can get the same basic, subpar care (a handful of Benzo's and phenothiazines) in a nice resort with a pool, sauna, golf course, etc. Leave in a week or two 'cured'.
 
The US has a similar policy, US prisons aren't much different.
It's a bit different, at least it is from what I heard talking to former inmates. The living conditions aren't nearly as bad as they appear to be in Indonesia. As for getting methadone in jail/prison, it depends where you go. In most places I believe they ween you off. Better than nothing.

Drugs? Yeah, you can get just about anything. Syringes? Harder to get. Didn't we have a recent article about someone trying to get needle exchanges introduced in US institutions?
 
That show on MSNBC called 'Lockup' had an episode where the CO was showing different kinds of contraband, including hand made syringes/needles. It was very grizzley. Basically the devices rip open the vein with a safety pin or sewing needle, and you stick the pointy end of a pen inside your vein, push down on the handmade plunger. I don't like picturing what kind of track marks something like this leaves.

I've never heard of MMT patients turned inmates being tapered- case law from the '70s seems to point to the government not having a duty to provide 'non-life sustaining' medication or some such nonsense.
 
^
I'm just going by what I heard from former inmates, one specifically who was put on it. This was at a PA prison, which I don't remember the name of. Got charged by Philly but there aren't any prisons here, which is why he was sent there.

Here's an article that mentions tapering. Not that it proves much, but along with the anecdotal evidence, it seems that at least some places taper you.

I've never heard of MMT patients turned inmates being tapered- case law from the '70s seems to point to the government not having a duty to provide 'non-life sustaining' medication or some such nonsense.
We had an article in here about woman who died in jail/prison while she was going through opiate withdrawal. Yes, opiate wd's aren't deadly unless there are underlying issues or aggravating circumstances. Anyway, I believe her relatives sued...
 
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