Pubdate: Thu, 02 Mar 2006 Source: Philippine Daily Inquirer (Philippines) Copyright: 2006 Philippine Daily Inquirer Contact: http://www.inquirer.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1073 Author: Ray S. Nobleza Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v06/n210/a05.html Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/areas/Philippines VIOLENCE AGAINST CHILDREN TWO seemingly unrelated articles in the Inquirer's Feb. 17 issue caught my attention: Michael Tan's "Drugs and the law"; and the news "Girl's death strikes fear in town." I personally believe they are somehow connected. Tan's article was insightful. He correctly pointed out that much of our anti-drug campaign is focused on punitive measures rather than on addiction-prevention and rehabilitation. Indeed, most Western countries deal with addiction as a health issue -- which explains the "lax" treatment Nora Aunor is getting from US courts. Here in the Philippines, we still view it through the prism of the criminal justice system. The Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002 and the annual allotment for the Department of Health's drug rehabilitation programs (as compared with the military and police budget) show how poorly the government understands the drug problem. No wonder, in spite of the authorities' success in jailing pushers and seizing large quantities of drugs, the number of addicts in the Philippines keeps on growing: In 1992, the UN estimate was 700,000; last year, the Narcotics Command counted 8 million. We know fully well that the number is much bigger. At the rate things are going, the war against drug abuse will go on for several decades more. Meanwhile, more children will be forced to work in subhuman conditions because their fathers will be too busy making a career out of aluminum foils and water pipes, driving their mothers insane. Others will end up as collateral damage in drug deals (involving their parents) gone wrong. Still, others will die in the very hands of their paranoid parents. Little girls will be raped and brutally murdered and found dead in garbage dumps and rivers. This is not a new phenomenon. This is not a "Filipino curse." Two decades ago, the same tragedy happened to little children in California. A man named Randy Fitzgerald conducted a thorough investigation. In his Reader's Digest article, "A Devil Stalks the Land," he warned the whole world about the direct link between drug abuse and violence against children. Obviously, no one among us listened. Our present approach to the drug problem lacks contingencies to protect our little children while the drug war rages. Ray S. Nobleza, 55 San Ramon, Camaligan, Camarines Sur 4401 - --- MAP posted-by: Tom