MELBOURNE,
Australia--Jimmy Dorabjee is the chairperson
of the Asian Harm Reduction Netowrk and
Program Manager for Sharan, an NGO based
in New Delhi, India. He spoke at several
sessions about Harm Reduction for injection
drug users and interventions required to
reduce the risk of HIV/AIDS for this marginalized
section of society. The following are excerpts
from an interview:
What
is the mandate of the Asian Harm Reduction Network?
I've been with the AHRN ever since its inception
which was in 1992 in Tasmania at the Harm Reduction
Conference. I have seen it grow from that level
to the level of political and economic clout that
it has today. AHRN has come to point where it is
an extremely important agency, not only in Asia,
but globally. For example the UN cannot come out
in open support of providing harm reduction for
drug users, so they work through the AHRN to make
statements and support it from a secondary point
of view. This sort of political maneuvering and
advocacy that is going on is extremely valuable
for the UN system itself in its direct response
to marginalized communities in HIV/AIDS as well
as to the beneficiaries. Once policies and commitments
to work with the Harm Reduction framework filter
down there will be a tremendous impact on the streets
to the beneficiaries--drug users and street workers
for example. So at the moment it may seem that
the AHRN is not servicing many of its constituencies,
but I think it's all a process of consolidation
of its own mandate--advocacy, networking, providing
information, access and linking people together.
How has the attitude toward drug users changed?
Again I think that the climate, especially in
Asia, is now pretty significantly changing from
what we had, say ten years ago when it was almost
a crime to talk about drug users. Now it's become
more possible to say 'I'm a drug user.' There's
a positive change occurring in the Asian region--I'm
not saying in all countries--but in some countries
there's a very humane approach that is beginning
to be adopted. I think a large amount of the credit
would go to the AHRN and nongovernmental organizations
that have been very loud in advocating these rights.
There are also a lot of the people on the ground
working in the area of drug users who have been
made aware of the issue of HIV/AIDS. People are
also less afraid of speaking out and acknowledging
that they use drugs because there is more understanding.
What harm reduction tools are used and how do
they reconcile with domestic laws?
In 1999 the UN
Asia Pacific Inter-Country Team (APICT) did an
assessment of policies and laws
that hinder or facilitate HIV/AIDS prevention in
seven countries in Asia. By a process of research
and documentation is has become clear that there
are actually not many countries that have very
strict laws against possession or buying syringes.
Many countries are ambiguous about that--you can
go into a pharmacy and buy syringes. But the point
is that drug users often don't have the money to
buy syringes everytime they need to inject. The
AHRN has been really successful in its advocacy
role. For instance they have been in Indonesia
and here they took the Indonesian health minister
for a tour of needle-exchange programs in Melbourne.
The Director of the AHRN has the uncanny skill
of working with the highest level of bureaucracy
and bringing in the public health perspective.
It has had a lot of impact to make people change
their perspective of needle exchange. Needle-exchange
is not the only harm reduction tool available.
It's a very effective one and it's very well evaluated
and tested. But things like methadone and drug
substitution are in the Asian context much less
threatening. In the Asian context it is hard to
argue the case for handing out needles to drug
users. But if you tell people "I want to give
drug users treatment so they don't use heroin," then
the response is much more positive. There are different
approaches you use with different people. You have
to be skillful in maneuvering toward a situation
where harm reduction is more acceptable.
How do you combat the mentality of society toward
drug users and argue the case that drug users should
be protected from HIV/AIDS?
We don't use words like combat. That's exactly
the militaristic rhetoric that has occurred about
drug users. There are a few arguments. One is the
epidemiological argument that drug users get infected,
but then drug users aren't islands in themselves.
They have girl friends and wives, so if they get
infected there is a possibility that they might
infect their partner and then children and then
the community. This seems to be very effective
and is globally accepted.
The other is the economic argument in that its
much easier to treat drug use with simple medication
than to treat an HIV-infected drug user after a
few years. It's much more costly, much more labor-intensive
and you've actually condemned the person to death.
This argument also works in most major democratic
countries or institutions. HIV/AIDS is a very expensive
illness. The costs on the family are also huge--the
loss of the main breadwinner in the family. Like
in Africa where entire villages, entire communities
have died--the situation could very quickly become
similar in Asia.
In my perspective at least, the South Asian region
is about five-eight years behind the African experience.
Already we are looking at deaths due to HIV, but
we because of our system we are unaware of this
occurrence. Only when it occurs on a larger, massive
scale will we realize that its upon us.
So this is how we can argue for much more compassionate
funding for HIV prevention. Again HIV affects the
most productive levels of society--people who are
14-15 years start experimenting with sex and, maybe,
drugs. It makes sense to do intensive prevention
work with the very young who will then become leaders
of our nations and contribute immensely to our
economic and social growth.
The critical element is when you toss in drug
use, people stand on morality and moral issues.
The criminalisation of the so-called illicit drugs
has no real rationale behind it. Until 1924 the
United States had heroin in cough syrups. It's
very hard to sit through all the issues that are
intermingled in this. And then we're brought up
with years of social and moral thinking and we
fail to look at drug users with better perspective.
There is much more openness now though. For example
in India we have managed to create so much opinion
for harm reduction activities for drug users that
the government now has plans for harm reduction
programs rather than the usual detox programs.
A lot of pros and cons have been weighed out and
regional countries are now seeing the value of
going down the harm reduction way among drugs.
Has the incidence of drug use increased in India?
We work in poor communities, in slums, and we've
been working with that target group for years.
We set up a drop in center and develop programs
locally so drug users actually come and find us
now. Drug use in the last ten years has grown pretty
significantly, but I think there are indications,
at least in Delhi, that it has stabilized at a
level since 1990, though the numbers are really
high. We project some 80-90 thousand use heroin
out of which about 20 percent inject.
Has there been a change on the ground in India?
From day one to now I've seen a quantum change,
and it's still occurring. For one we've managed
to move from a project in one city to five cities.
The government now is interested in drug substitution,
needle exchange and harm reduction services. They
look to us to resource the training. This major
shift has occurred in the past 3-4 years. There
has been a major shift in the way our government
views drug use issues.
The government funds drug treatment programs--there
are 550 in India--and now the health ministry wants
a harm reduction expert to work in each of these
centers. The state aid cells in India have also
been mandated to fund needle exchanges in cities.
Of course the bureaucracy is slow and money is
slow to come, but the intent is now there.
You also see it everyday of your life with the
drug users, or former drug users. People who were
dirty weak malnourished are now cleaner, come about
with much more optimism. We need to have research
to prove this, but in our everyday lives we see
a change.
The issue is getting a lot of play here. But beyond
that do you think the cause of harm reduction for
drug users has gained anything from this conference?
For drug use issues I think this conference is
the best that has happened so far. Even if you
look at Durban, the international conference, there
were small patches of drug use theme, mainly in
posters. But here there is a drug use theme and
session everyday.There has been an enormous recognition
of how injecting drug use is driving the epidemic
in this region.
There have been so many sessions dedicated to
drug use here. Conferences outside your own country
give you time to share and gain knowledge from
people who work in the same field. The Ministerial
Meeting means that there's a lot of interest in
the issue of HIV/AIDS. And these ministers and
whoever else has come with them will go back to
their countries taking the message that harm reduction
among, say, drug users works. I'm certain that
has a ripple and snowball effect.
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