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Illicit Drug Use on the Rise in Europe

Deutsche Welle

Friday 24 Nov 2006

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As prices for illicit drugs keep dropping, juvenile drug use in some
European countries is on the rise, in spite of record levels of
seizures. Afghanistan remains a prime source for Europe's heroin addicts.

The prices of illicit drugs in the European Union keep dropping, in
spite of record levels of seizures involving cannabis, heroin, cocaine
and amphetamines, in particular the mind-altering drug ecstasy. The
findings were published in a report on Thursday by the European
Monitoring Center for Drugs and Drug Addiction.

"There are signs in some countries that ecstasy and cocaine are cheaper
today than in the late 1980s and early 1990s," according to the agency's
annual report. In spite of record levels of drug seizures and successful
efforts to stem the flow of cocaine imports from South America,
officials at the drug monitoring agency say that they are failing to hit
newer routes used by drug traffickers.

An analysis of street prices based on data from 29 countries -- the 25
EU members, plus Bulgaria, Norway, Turkey, and Romania -- showed that
average prices for most substances, adjusted for inflation, had fallen
from 1999 to 2004, with the price of ecstasy down by 47 percent, heroin
by 45 percent, cocaine by 22 percent and cannabis dropping to 19
percent. Although black market prices have dropped significantly, there
still remain considerable price differences within Europe.

The use of cannabis, the plant from which marijuana and hashish are
derived, is the most widespread of all illegal drugs, according to the
EU study. Some 20 percent of the population in Europe has tried it at
least once, with its use not only confined to young people. Many
habitual users continue smoking marijuana or hashish well into their 30s
and 40s.

"Afghans producing heroin like hell"

A main source of illicit drugs is Afghanistan, according to Wolfgang
Götz, head of the EU drug monitoring center, who said that the Afghans
were "producing heroin like hell," with its opium crop supplying 89
percent of Europe's heroin.

"The global supply for heroin is now exceeding global demand," added Götz.

Whether the fall in drug prices reflects changes in supply or demand or
both, is unclear, although the agency expressed concern about a rise in
illegal drug consumption among juveniles, with the highest rates of
abuse among youth in Spain, France and Britain.
Amphetamine and cocaine abuse is highest in Britain according to the
report, with consumption rising in the entire EU. Some 1.5 million
Europeans consume these hard drugs regularly.

Heroin abuse, on the other hand, has become less widespread, though it
remains the most addictive of all illicit drugs and accounts for 60
percent of those who seek help. To curb the spread of AIDS and other
infectious diseases among drug addicts, most EU countries now offer
public programs that distribute sterile needles or replacement drugs to
help wean addicts off the most potent substances.

According to Götz, 1.7 million Europeans have drug problems, meaning
that they regularly consume hard drugs, much of which is self injected.
On an annual basis, between 7,000 and 8,000 Europeans die of
drug-related overdoses, mostly from heroin, but also from cocaine, in
particular its potent derivative, crack.
http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,2144,2247455,00.html

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