updated Wed June 19, 2013

Former Female Drug Addicts Rehabilitate Users in Nepal

Former female drug users in Nepal say it’s harder for women and girls to recover from addiction. Now, they are finding employment at rehabilitation centers to help other young women combat their addiction and the social stigma attached to it.
Dristi Nepal

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October 11, 2012

KATHMANDU, NEPAL – “I have lost the respect and trust of my family and the community using the drugs,” says a 20-year-old woman with a dark complexion. “But I don’t want other young girls like me to endure what I did.”

 

The former drug user, whose name is withheld to protect her from the social stigma attached to drug use, is from Lalitpur, a neighboring district of Kathmandu. Influenced by friends, she says she switched from smoking cigarettes to smoking marijuana at the age of 15.

 

“There was no one to help me when I needed help. I experienced that need and, therefore, I decided to help others.”

She eventually became addicted. A puff of smoke soon became more important to her than her studies, she says. She then moved on to harder drugs.

 

At first, it scared her when she and her male friends went to the nearby woods to smoke “brown sugar,” a slang term for an adulterated form of street heroin, rolled in a cigarette. But when she tried it, it felt like the Earth was moving, she says.

 

During those days, she felt nauseated and dizzy, with frequent headaches. But later, she started regularly using hashish, brown sugar and heroin.

 

“I gradually stopped going to the class,” she says.

 

Though she had become an addict, she didn’t want her three younger sisters to follow in her footsteps. So she used to hide her marijuana and heroin under her pillow, inside a cupboard or in old shoes.

 

Soon, the 5,000 rupees ($60) her parents gave her as allowance each month was no longer enough to support her drug habit. So she began selling syringes for injecting drugs.

 

But as her addiction grew, she resorted to sex work as a way to make fast cash. She says she sold her body for 2,000 rupees ($25) to buy brown sugar. And when she was high on drugs, she engaged in sexual intercourse without condoms.

 

Men who found out about her addiction would lure her into bed by promising money or brown sugar, she says. But they would often leave her with nothing.

 

Two years ago, multiple families approached her father with marriage proposals. But when the boys’ families found out about her addiction problem, they backed out. This pushed her to take more drugs, she says.

 

“I started believing that the drug was my friend in my good times and bad ones,” she says.

 

Abandoned and ostracized, she decided to give up drugs with the hope that she could return to a respectable life. She began visiting the Aavash Samuha Drop-in Center for female drug users near her home in Lalitpur.

 

It has been four months since she gave up drugs.

 

She now works as a counselor at the center, a nongovernmental agency that has been working for the rehabilitation of female drug users for more than five years. She counsels women on the risks of using drugs and transmitting HIV through syringes. She assists in the rehabilitation of former drug users and with awareness campaigns.

 

“At present, I openly work against drug abuse,” she says.

 

Now,

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