SOCIETY: Walking on Thin Ice
Under a flyover on the bank of a drain in Hayatabad, Peshawar, teenaged Ali Daud lies motionless among a group of addicts. His sunken green eyes, dishevelled hair and slender frame confirm that the boy is already a shadow of himself. He occasionally raises his head and squints at passers-by and the traffic on the overhead bridge. After a while, he drags himself up and totters to a nearby lane to get hold of more drugs.
But contrary to what many might believe, the youngsters huddled under the bridge are not addicted to heroin or hashish. Their addiction is crystal meth, commonly known as ‘ice’. In local jargon, it is known as ‘sheesha.’
“People say it makes you cool and hyperactive,” says Sajjad Gul, a 20-year-old ice addict. “Some say it makes you a ‘sex god’.”
Gul walks up to the Karkhano Market everyday to score his stash from another young man his age. “The transfer is discreet,” he says. “Then I rush back to join my drug buddies [under the bridge]. No one else comes here. Ice puts you in a dreamland. I have used heroin too but ice is a very different sensation.”
Forget heroin or hashish, crystal meth is the new fad among youngsters in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa ... and it is rising sharply
Contrary to popular perception, however, crystal meth addiction is not merely a phenomenon of the poor. In fact, the stories of Ali Daud and Sajjad Gul are no different from hundreds of young students staying in hostels on campuses of private and public sector educational institutions. Some even claim that it is more a phenomenon of the elite — since imported ice costs a lot more than other drugs.
And the trend of consuming crystal meth is on the sharp rise. Doctors and professionals associated with counter-drug abuse measures claim that over the past six months, there has been a 20 percent increase in the number of addicts using crystal meth. The addiction is also common among school-going teens while visitors to small restaurants and indoor sports clubs are no exception either. Meanwhile, the absence of a proper drugs control policy to check and curb the peddling of crystal meth has meant that it has fast become the drug of choice for those suffering depression, mental agony, or even erectile dysfunction.