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Home News Myanmar’s Crisis & the World

Myanmar’s Lost Generation Battles Trauma, Addiction at Jungle Rehab

AFP by AFP
October 30, 2024
in Myanmar’s Crisis & the World
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UN Envoy Says She Met With Myanmar Junta Boss

A recovering drug addict from Myanmar is given disinfection swabs for an acupuncture session during a rehabilitation program run by DARE Network in Mae Sot in September 2024. / AFP

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MAE SOT, Thailand—In a drug treatment centre in a wooden stilt house deep in the Thai jungle, young refugees from Myanmar wait patiently for the prick of an acupuncture needle.

They are among the thousands who have become addicted to methamphetamine and other synthetic drugs that have flooded camps housing those forced to flee their homes by Myanmar’s civil war.

Myanmar’s military ousted Daw Aung San Suu Kyi’s government in a February 2021 coup, igniting a conflict that has killed thousands, displaced nearly 3 million people and triggered a boom in drug production.

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A rehabilitation program across the border in Thailand, run by former addicts, is trying to help stem the rising tide of addiction among young people living in the camps.

“Youths from the camps are hopeless… they don’t know what to do. They have no guarantee for jobs and no future,” said Marip, a counsellor and former addict, using a pseudonym because of the stigma associated with addiction.

“They end up taking drugs. Drugs are easy to find in the camps,” the 34-year-old told AFP at the camp in a remote forest location in Thailand’s western province of Tak.

The Drug and Alcohol Recovery and Education (DARE) rehabilitation center, funded by the UN and other aid agencies, uses acupuncture as part of its regimen , along with massages to reduce drug cravings and yoga to help manage intense withdrawal pains.

The group operates in five refugee camps, as well as more than 40 villages in Myanmar’s Karen state, and claims a 60 percent success rate for its 90-day treatment program.

It did not allow AFP to speak to any of its patients or former cases, saying doing so would violate its treatment principles.

‘Cheaper than beer’

More than three years of conflict in Myanmar combined with the easy availability of drugs have created a “perfect storm”, Edward Blakely, a director at DARE, told AFP.

“You have two large problems, trauma from people who fled their homes and saw their relatives killed and an abundant supply of drugs and a sense of hopelessness,”  he said.

The junta led by Senior General Min Aung Hlaing is battling multiple armed groups opposed to its rule across the country.

As well as death and displacement, the conflict has also seen law enforcement wither, enabling drug gangs to ramp up production.

The “Golden Triangle” region where Myanmar, Thailand and Laos meet has long been a hub for the illegal drug trade.

But the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said in a report this year that methamphetamine production has “significantly increased”, sending wholesale prices of the drug’s crystal form crashing from over US$10,000 a tonne in 2019 to $4,000 a tonne in 2023.

On the streets and in the camps, a tablet of “yaba”—a potent mix of methamphetamine and caffeine—can be bought for small change.

“They are so cheap at this point, it is really easy for people to buy drugs,” Benedikt Hofmann, the UNODC’s Southeast Asia and Pacific deputy representative, told AFP.

“Right now, in most parts of the Mekong, getting a tablet of yaba is cheaper than buying a beer.”

Drug-funded groups

The displacement camps are in border regions of Myanmar mostly controlled by ethnic minority armed groups—many of which fund their activities by making and trafficking drugs.

One senior anti-drugs police official in Myanmar told AFP that many new trafficking routes had opened up around the country due to the fighting.

“We face many difficulties in cracking down on the drug trade,” the official who asked not to be named told AFP.

“The problem is severe, as many armed groups are involved.”

The costs fall on those who have suffered most, and counsellor Marip told AFP: “There is no price that compares to the freedom from drugs.”

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