Sierra Leone: Addicts Dig Up Skeletons to Make “Zombie Drug” | Vantage with Palki Sharma
Sierra Leone faces a significant drug crisis marked by widespread substance abuse, particularly of Kush, popularly known as the “zombie drug”. This is a potent synthetic psychoactive drug that comprises of marijuana, opioids, and human skeletons. Now addicts are digging up skeletons from graves to make the drug. Drug abuse is so rampant the country has called it a national emergency. What’s behind this crisis? Poverty, unemployment and the lack of adequate rehabilitation and treatment facilities. It is a multi-faceted problem. Addressing the drug crisis requires a comprehensive approach. But can Sierra Leone curb this problem? Palki Sharma tells you.
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Inside Sierra Leone’s notoriously corrupt justice system there’s been an explosion in female prison rates. But there are some who are fighting for these women, trapped in poverty and discrimination, and behind bars.
Twelve years after Sierra Leone’s long civil war came to an end, its broken institutions and weak development indicators continue to impact on the lives of its people. And as ever it’s women who bear the brunt. Aside from the usual grim data, one statistic stands out: the number of female prisoners has doubled over the past three years. Paralegals Victoria and Marvel are fighting for the rights of women trapped by a corrupt system that discriminates against them. In a country of only 400 lawyers, Sierra Leone’s 80 paralegals have a crucial role to play in trying to deliver basic human rights. As we watch Victoria and Marvel at work, negotiating with police and prison authorities, advising and at times cajoling the women they have come to help, it becomes clear how daunting that task is.
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