Drug
addiction undermines youth in northern Bangladesh
Ataur Rahman
Rana gave his family some golden moments to cherish.
The family distributed sweets after he obtained ‘‘star marks" both
in SSC and HSC examinations. The family's hopes were high when he opted
for studying business administration or BBA.
That was until a couple of years ago when the parents
noticed something strange about their talented son. Rana began coming
home late and missing classes. He started spending more time with some
jobless youths than with books. The parents were shocked to learn one
day that their most trusted son had found him in the wrong company and
taken to drugs.
Rana's family could afford his study abroad and
so he was sent to Bangalore in India. This was intended to keep him away
from his drug addict friends and bring his attention back to books. It
did not work. After just one year, Rana had come back home and his condition
deteriorated. He also returned to his bad friends and began stealing money
from the family to buy drugs.
Unable to control him, Rana's family even tried
to lock him in. Confined to his room, the young man tried to kill himself
at least twice. Alarmed by his condition, the family took him to a clinic
that treats drug addiction. At 22, Rana committed suicide there.
‘‘I've lost my best friend," says Rana's closest
friend Shafiul Alam Bakul. Bakul witnesses how his friend destroyed himself
despite being a bright student. According to him, Rana started taking
phynsidyl with friends for the sake of fun. ‘‘But he did not stop there.
Rana gradually became addicted to more harmful drugs such as heroin,"
says Bakul. During this period, Rana stopped attending classes and steal
money from his family to buy drugs. He was expelled from his college after
the authorities came to know his drug addiction. Rana's 40-year-old mother
believes she was too young to see the death of her son.
Drug addiction has killed many young people like
Rana and shattered the dreams of their families in northern Bangladesh.
A recent survey says that drugs claimed at least 4,000 lives in this region
in past 15 years, about 80 percent of them were young people. In last
one decade, desperate parents handed to police at least 1520 children
for severe drug addiction, according to the survey by a drug treatment
medical centre and a NGO named, (Shotto) Reality.
The survey has revealed some alarming statistics.
It says that nearly 120,000 people in Rajshahi division are regular drug
addicts. And at least 12,000 people are involved in illicit drug trafficking
in the region bordering on India.
Says a local resident, ‘‘ganja is the widely used
and easily available drug in the area. They usually start with phensydil
and then take all kinds of drugs, including heroin. Drug addiction is
also growing among young girls."A single drug addict spends from
Tk. 1,200 to Tk. 12,000 on drugs a month and many of the addicts are from
rich families.
Zahurul Alam, a Rajshahi University student, says
he believes that at least 5,000 university students in Rajshahi division
are drug addicts. He says drug addiction begins mostly in college.
Another study has found that drug addiction has
increased along the frontier districts. It says at least 1,500 people
died from drug addiction in past five years in the north-western frontier
districts.
Says Abdul Barek Khan, an anti-drug activist in
Bogra, "Government authorities are doing nothing to stop drug trafficking
in this frontier region. And this is one of the reasons why drug addiction
is increasing."
- NewsNetwork.
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