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News (Media Awareness Project) - Indonesia: OPED: The Future Of AIDS Tied Up With Drug Use
Title:Indonesia: OPED: The Future Of AIDS Tied Up With Drug Use
Published On:1999-11-28
Source:Jakarta Post (Indonesia)
Fetched On:2008-09-05 14:38:55
THE FUTURE OF AIDS TIED UP WITH DRUG USE

JAKARTA (JP): I'm angry! For those who know me, that's not unusual, but
this time I'm really angry! Why? I've just come from sitting with four
young people who have recently found out that they are HIV positive. That
means that the virus which causes AIDS is now multiplying in their blood
stream, and some time in the future, maybe in ten years time, they'll fall
sick.

There's no cure for them, just hope.

So why am I angry? All of these four young men, two of them brothers both
still in high school, became infected by injecting themselves with drugs,
using needles that had previously been used by someone else who was already
HIV positive. This is the most efficient way of transmitting this virus
from one person to another. In many parts of the world, as many as 70
percent of injecting drug users are HIV positive. We don't know what the
rate is for Indonesia -- no one is checking -- but we suspect that it's
already well above 10 percent.

But why should I be angry? Surely it's their own fault! After all, they're
only addicts, junkies. The world is better off without them! I hope I don't
hear you saying this. Because in Jakarta now, there are probably over
100,000 junkies injecting themselves three times each day with heroin.
Mostly young people under the age of 20 -- just like my four friends. Most
of them are not bad, just misled. Misinformed.

Misdirected. They didn't set out to become addicts, let alone to become
infected with HIV. Led astray by their friends -- did it never happen to us
when we were their age? We were lucky! Hard drugs like heroin were not
common then, and AIDS had not been heard of.

What makes me angry is our response to this terrible dual plague. As I
travel around Jakarta, everywhere I see banners proclaiming this district
"free of drugs", encouraging the residents of another to declare war on
drugs, to get rid of drug users. Would that it was that easy! Many of us
know how difficult it is to stop smoking -- we've tried for years, become
expert -- but we expect our kids to just say no to the much more addictive
substances which we've allowed them to get hooked on. It just ain't
realistic! OK, it'll work for some kids who have yet to try them. But what
are we doing for those who can't say no? Do we offer them treatment,
rehabilitation, help to clean themselves up? With probably less than a
thousand places in treatment centers in Jakarta, clearly that's not an
option for many. And most of the centers are there to make a profit, and so
charge high prices, far beyond the pocket of addicts from the lower layers
of society.

So we allow the police to hassle them, to make life even more difficult for
them. Lock 'em up? How does that help? Even if there were enough places in
the prisons, is that really what we want to do with 16-year-old kids? Send
them to the one institution that will really turn them bad? Sounds like a
lousy idea to me.

You may say my four young friends are lucky. They'll probably get to live
for at least another 12 years -- if they stay clean. But every day, one or
two of their mates die in Jakarta of an overdose. Hospital emergency rooms
don't know how to treat overdoses; they don't have the time or the
medicines to save them. Many die at home, because no one knows how to give
first aid, and the ambulance service -- well let's forget the ambulance
service, you're better off waiting for a taxi in a thunderstorm.

It's time that we realized that these kids are not just going to say no,
they are not going to give up their habits. Lecturing them, holding
seminars, putting up banners, none of these are helping these kids.

What we need to do is to help them to get through this phase, even though
it be a long phase, while limiting the harm they do to themselves -- and to
others.

What types of harm are they? How can we reduce them? Perhaps the first
thing is to reach out to them, not just ostracize them. We must offer them
the means to continue their habits, bad though those may be, in greater
safety. We must reduce the likelihood that they will become infected with
HIV -- and then pass this on to their sexual partners and thence to their
own children. We must recognize that our community is harmed by the
approach that only considers law enforcement, and does not recognize that
drug use is also a public health matter -- one that can be addressed by
relatively simple, if certainly controversial means.

Thus far, there has been no sign that we are even ready to start a dialog
about harm reduction. There is little evidence that we really give a damn
about these kids. And that's what makes me angry!

As we approach World AIDS Day, let us be fully aware that the future of
AIDS in Indonesia is inextricably tied up with drug use. Unless we take
action today, unless we start to think about the options today, Indonesia
will go the way of Thailand, of Vietnam, even of Myanmar. We cannot wait
for eradication of drugs, even if we foolishly hope that this multimillion
dollar business will go away just like that. Our kids will continue to be
tempted by drugs, and some -- too many -- will succumb. We must provide an
environment in which they can come out from behind this terrible shadow
without having their lives permanently blighted.
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