Indonesia wages war on drugs but
cuts funding for rehabilitation
President Joko Widodo said drugs
pose a bigger danger than Islamist militancy and has ordered an intensification
of a drugs war that has included the execution of drug traffickers. The
government estimates there are six million drug users in Indonesia, a country
of 250 million people.
Rizki Mulyadi sits half-submerged in
a steaming herbal bath, hands folded in his lap and head down.
Mulyadi hopes the concoction he is
bathing in – and the Islamic teacher who makes it – will help him overcome a
six-year addiction to the drug of choice for many in Indonesia: crystal
methamphetamine, or "meth". The traditional rehabilitation centre in
Purbalingga village on Java island says it has treated hundreds of addicts like
Mulyadi, 26, with herbal teas and baths, prayer and counselling.
President Joko Widodo says drugs
pose a bigger danger than Islamist militancy and he has ordered an
intensification of a drugs war that has included the execution of drug
traffickers, the latest last week when three Nigerians and an Indonesian faced
a firing squad. But while raids, arrests and punishments pick up, state funding
for rehabilitation, that weans people off drugs and cuts demand, is dwindling.
That leaves thousands of people like
Mulyadi with few affordable options in a country that within years has gone
from being a drug transit point to one of Southeast Asia's biggest markets for
narcotics. "We need support in terms of budget to be able to rehabilitate
all drug users in need," said Social Affairs Minister Khofifah Indra
Parawansa. "Our budget alone is not enough for that, it is experiencing a
decline."
The government estimates there are
six million drug users in the country of 250 million people. Of those, more
than 1 million are addicted to meth, the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime said in
a 2013 report. But less that one percent of dependent users got treatment in
2014 compared with a global average of 16 percent, it said.
Indonesian law mandates
rehabilitation for people caught with small quantities of drugs. But many end
up in crowded jails. "Many of those who are in prison should not be
sentenced to prison at all, they should be sent to rehab," Parawansa said.
Parawansa's ministry aims to
rehabilitate 15,000 drug users this year on a budget of 87 billion rupiah ($6.6
million). Next year, it will only get funds to help 9,000, she said. While
rehabilitation funding has been cut, the president has tripled the budget of
the national counter-narcotics agency, known as the BNN, to 2.1 billion rupiah
($160,000). It also draws on the police budget.
A spokesman for Widodo, asked about
the cut to rehabilitation spending, said many areas were seeing tighter
budgets, and it did not mean the president did not value rehabilitation.
"The president is concerned
about how to prevent the spread in drug use and rehab programmes are part of
that," said the spokesman, Johan Budi. "We need to be hard on
smugglers and traffickers, and that explains why the president is taking a hard
approach, but that doesn't mean the war on drugs is at the expense of
rehabilitation. Both law enforcement and rehabilitation are happening at the
same time."
HERBS AND FAITH
Indonesia is not the only country to
take a hard line. President Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippines has also
declared a drug war and about 300 suspected dealers were shot dead in July,
most in vigilante killings, police say.
Thailand has also for years been
tough on drugs but its soaring prison population has recently prompted a
re-think and the downgrading of meth from a Category 1 drug to reduce numbers
in jail. Critics say Widodo's stand on drugs criminalizes victims and makes the
path to recovery that much harder.
"They want to build more
prisons but they should be building more rehab centres and making more
treatment options available," said Andreas Harsono of Human Rights Watch
in Jakarta.
The centre in Purbalingga is one of
160 such facilities across Indonesia that use traditional methods. There are 18
government rehab centres and almost 400 private ones and public clinics using
more conventional means.
Ahmad Ischsan Maulana, head of the
Purbalingga centre, said his clients must stop all drugs when they arrive.
"I get them to quit immediately and replace their intake with herbs,"
he said.
"That relieves withdrawal
symptoms without side effects," said Maulana, known as "the boiling
teacher" because of the hot baths. His small complex of dormitories houses
about 30 people. "What's important is our faith in Allah who is the only
one that can heal us. No doctor can heal us of drug addiction."
He says none of this clients has come back but he does not
monitor people after they leave. Mulyadi said he was determined to stop drugs.
"I've come here to rebuild my relationship with my family," he said,
showing off a tattoo on his chest of his five-year-old son.
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