Yaba, the 'crazy medicine'
By Dr.Fourkan Ali
Yaba, or 'crazy medicine' in Thai, is a tablet form of
methamphetamine, and a very powerful stimulant. Introduced to East Asia during
World War II to enhance soldiers' performance, methamphetamine has become
increasingly popular in East Asia ,
particularly among young people. Yaba is now the main form of methamphetamine
abused in Thailand , Laos and Cambodia
as well as Viet Nam and Myanmar , where
it is typically manufactured.
Mixed with caffeine and usually 30 per cent methamphetamine, the
drug is a central nervous system stimulant. Although it comes in a pill form,
yaba is usually crushed and smoked. Users get an intense 'burst' of energy,
followed by increased activity, decreased appetite and a general sense of
well-being. Once the effects wear off, the user 'crashes' and experiences
prolonged periods of sleep and depression.
Like other forms of methamphetamine, long-term abuse of yaba can
produce strong dependence. Users develop tolerance and require increasing
amounts of the drug to feel the same effects. Excessive doses can result in
convulsions, seizures and death from respiratory failure, stroke or heart
failure. The drug can trigger aggressive and violent behaviour, and psychiatric
disorders have also been associated with its use.
Traditionally used by occupational workers such as truck drivers,
the use of yaba in East Asia shifted into
youth culture about 10 years ago. Starting in Thailand
and spreading into Laos , Cambodia and Viet Nam , yaba consumers in the
region are now estimated in the millions. Recently, the drug has been spreading
toward the Indian subcontinent; in 2017, a record 2,200,000 yaba tablets were
confiscated in Bangladesh
where there is a potentially very large market.
The development and spread of yaba in the region has been
opportunistic. As UNODC expert Jeremy Douglas explains, "it is a drug that
is cheap to manufacture and cheap to purchase. You introduce it somewhere and
develop a market fairly quickly because it is cheap and highly addictive."
With one tablet costing as little as US$ 1 in Cambodia
to US$ 5 in Bangkok ,
the drug is very easy to produce if in possession of the necessary precursor
materials. "You can have labs producing 10,000 tablets per hour hidden
anywhere", he adds.
Unlike geographically confined, crop-based drugs, such as opium in
Afghanistan ,
synthetic drugs like yaba can be produced anywhere in the world where there are
weaknesses in law enforcement and in precursor chemical regulations. The
portable and clandestine nature of production also makes it difficult to
monitor and assess the situation systematically. "At the moment the
information base is quite fractured", says Douglas .
"In some parts of the world, we know it is there - we just don't know the
extent to which it is."
To help address the issue, UNODC is launching the Global
Synthetics Monitoring: Analysis, Reporting and Trends (SMART) Programme. Set up
in hotspots and key priority regions of the world, SMART teams will assess data
and information, thus enabling countries to strategically plan prevention and
law enforcement responses.
The writer Teacher
& Columnist
01611579267
dr.fourkanali@gmail.com
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