Podcast – Octets de réalité : À propos des drogues en Asie du Sud-Est

Reality Bytes Podcast

Actualités

Podcast – Octets de réalité : À propos des drogues en Asie du Sud-Est

7 septembre 2020

L’ONUSIDA et l’IDPC lancent une série de podcasts dans lesquels ils peuvent discuter avec des experts d’expériences réelles de traitement de la dépendance et de réinsertion en Asie du Sud-Est. Pour en savoir plus, en anglais, veuillez lire les informations ci-dessous.

When we think about people who use drugs, there is a tendency to refer to drug rehabilitation centers as the solution, and without thinking about the importance of what the person actually needs or wants. Moreover, for women who use drugs, their experiences too often involve stigmatization, marginalization, and violence. Little is known about what happens in the many drug rehabilitation and treatment centers around Asia and whether they are helping or hurting. Conditions in drug rehabilitation centers can be overcrowded and poor, and fail to treat people with the standard of health and human rights that each of us deserve.

This year, twelve United Nations entities have issued a joint statement calling for the closure of compulsory drug detention and rehabilitation centers. Amnesty International has also reported torture, sexual violence, and deaths in their report covering prisons and places of detention, including drug rehabilitation centres, on Cambodia.

To shed light on this issue, UNAIDS and the International Drug Policy Consortium launched a podcast series ‘Reality Bytes: On Drugs in Southeast Asia’ to chat with various experts about the real experiences faced with drug treatment and rehabilitation in the region. Tune in to hear stories and voices that are too rarely heard.

Episode 1: On women who use drugs

In this first episode, we talk with Rosma about her experiences going through over 17 different types of drug treatment and rehabilitation programmes in Indonesia. She bravely opens up about how she started using drugs, struggles with her family, and why she believes it is important to talk about her difficult experiences.

The transcript of the first episode can be found here.

Profils associés

  • International Drug Policy Consortium (IDPC)
  • UNAIDS

Traductions