La política de drogas en Indonesia: represión y recorte de fondos

Noticias

La política de drogas en Indonesia: represión y recorte de fondos

31 agosto 2016

Debido al recorte de fondos a los servicios de rehabilitación, a gran parte del millón de personas que sufren una dependencia de drogas en Indonesia no le queda otra opción que recurrir a remedios herbales y de índole religiosa.

Más información, en inglés, está disponible abajo.

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Rizki Mulyadi sits half-submerged in a steaming herbal bath, hands folded in his lap and head down.

The 26-year-old 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, such as Mulyadi, with herbal teas and baths, prayer and counselling.

"There is an urgent need to have a more nuanced conversation about what effective, human rights-compliant treatment entails in Indonesia, and to clearly differentiate between cmpulsory or mandatory forms of treatment, and truly voluntary, community-based options," Rick Lines, executive director at UK-based Harm Reduction International, told Al Jazeera.

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Thumbnail: Flickr CC WikimediaCommons