From Our Own Correspondent: Getting the Needle
Lucy Ash investigates the Russian approach to drug use and harm prevention. Why is methadone illegal and needle-exchanges so hard to find - and what does that mean for HIV rates?
In a special essay, Lucy Ash investigates how Russia and Ukraine tackle drug abuse - and what their different approaches mean for HIV rates and the number of drug injectors. In Russia today, the heroin substitute methadone, often used to try and get drug users' regimes under control, is banned and needle exchanges are hard to find, while many organisations trying to work with addicts have had their funds frozen, or are stigmatised for being tools of foreign influence. The Ukrainian approach has been more conciliatory until now, but can it survive amid the diplomatic and military crisis?
Photo: Bottles of the synthetic opioid Methadone are burnt during an operation by Russian Federal Drug Control Service officers in Simferopol on December 23, 2014 which destroyed nearly 30 kgs of the drug. (YURI LASHOV/AFP/Getty Images)
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- Thu 16 Apr 2015 16:20GMT麻豆社 World Service Online