Pubdate: Wed, 13 Aug 2003
Source: China Daily (China)
Contact:   http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/911
Note: hawked from the Hong Kong edition

DRUG FIGHT: WOMEN TURN TABLES ON MEN ADDICTS

No one was sure whether the plan would work. But the 37 women from 
Southwest China's Yunnan Province, whose husbands had all succumbed to the 
lure of drugs, were determined. They had nothing to lose, and they wanted 
to turn the tables.

Erkun Village sits on a hillside about 70 kilometres from the China-Myanmar 
border in western Yunnan's Yingjiang County. All 298 of its residents 
occupying 63 households are of the Jinpo ethnic minority, known as Kachin 
in Myanmar. They enjoyed relatively peaceful, happy lives up until the 
1980s, when the drug trade active in the adjacent notorious Golden Triangle 
made its way across the border as China opened up.

At its peak, from 1991 to 1992, the rampant drug abuse in Erkun Village 
claimed addicts in almost every family, while five to six households were 
regularly engaged in drug dealing, recalls Li Genxian, former chief of the 
village. The youngest drug user in Erkun at that time was 12 years old, he 
says.

Members of the Erkun anti-drug task force in Yingjiang County, Yunnan 
Province. Kyin Mu Pu (second from left) leads the team and has helped many, 
as well as her husband Yin La Sau (beside her), to abandon the drug habit. 
[China Daily]

In a matter of years, drug abuse infiltrated 838 of the 1,142 villages in 
Yingjiang County, which shares a 214.6-kilometre border with Myanmar, and 
4,254 people were habitual drug users by 2002.

Drugs touched the family of Kyin Mu Pu, 49, of Erkun Village, somewhat by 
accident.

In late 1996, her husband was involved in a traffic accident while driving 
a tractor. His liver was damaged and he was often tormented by sharp pains.

"Someone recommended 'No 4' (the code name for heroin among the locals) to 
him, saying it might kill the pain and reduce inflammation. He tried it. 
And in no time he was addicted," says the wife.

Meanwhile, her two teenage sons also got hooked on the drug while looking 
after their father.

"They stole rice, fertilizer and seeds from home and traded them for No 4. 
Anything worth any amount of money eventually disappeared from the house."

She is especially upset that heroin was so readily available. "For 10 yuan 
(US$1.20), you can get two pinches of No 4, enough to fill the cap of a 
penicillin bottle twice."

Kyin Mu Pu and a few other women decided they were no longer willing to sit 
back and watch while drugs gripped their community. They approached the 
village committee with an application to set up an organization of their 
own to fight heroin.

In August 2000, a 37-member-strong, all-female, anti-drug task force was 
formally assembled, on the heels of a campaign launched by the local 
women's federation in 1999 to empower women and help them "keep drugs out 
of my home".

"All women in the village are eligible to join this organization, so long 
as they agree to leave their fingerprints as proof of their commitment," 
says Kyin Mu Pu, an eloquent speaker with a remarkable ability to rally people.

At the women's urging, a village meeting was held to adopt an anti-drug 
accord, outlining detailed terms of the fines to be imposed on drug users, 
dealers and traffickers. The document also gives the task-force members the 
right to turn traffickers over to local police if they are found with drugs 
in their possession. In addition, drug users from outside the village will 
be fined and driven out if they are caught taking drugs in the community.

Erkun villagers using or dealing in drugs outside the village are also 
subject to fines and can be taken in to police. Villagers who harbour 
relatives or outsiders using or dealing in drugs shall not be exempted from 
penalty either, even if they do not use or deal in drugs themselves.

The 37 women, who divide into groups to accomplish their tasks, have also 
shadowed drug users and dealers in their village. "We followed one drug 
user for some 20 kilometres to a neighbouring township once," says Kyin Mu Pu.

Apart from enduring the expected barrage of foul language addicts often 
hurled at them, some of the team members were threatened with violence and 
even death. Their own families had no sympathy for them either at first.

"My youngest son told me flatly that he hated me and would not help me, 
even if I was beaten to death. We were very frightened during our night 
patrols. At least the local police gave us their full support and were 
available whenever we were in need," says Kyin Mu Pu, adding that the 
personal risks were worth taking for the common good of the village.

Still, certain incidents remain on her conscience, such as the time she 
handed a couple over to police after seizing more than 17 grams of drugs 
from them.

"The wife was sentenced to seven years in prison, while the husband was 
sent to a labour camp for three years, for drug abuse and trafficking. They 
have two innocent children, an eight-year-old boy and a 13-year-old girl."

Team members visit the couple regularly and decided to give the children 
500 yuan (US$60) each year. They also negotiated a fee exemption with the 
local school and help the family with their sugar cane fields.

"Punishment is not the only way to save sick souls," she says. In much the 
same way that they assist the imprisoned couple, team members help out 
addicted villagers sent to the rehabilitation centre with their farm work. 
To prevent them from selling their crops for drug money, a small proportion 
of their land is taken over for use in village rehabilitation sessions or 
leased to other villagers for farming, to be returned to them when they 
have fully recovered.

"A healthy environment is vital to successful abstention. Drug users who 
have kicked the habit in classes or rehab centres can easily take it up 
again once circumstances allow. Lack of self-control, care or help from 
their family or society coupled with poor health and laziness in the early 
stages of their recovery can combine to push them back into their old 
ways," says Tang Quanyu, vice-chairwoman of the Yingjiang women's federation.

In time, the persistence and patience of the task force together with their 
heartfelt concern for the addicts melted the ice.

"My husband, the oldest drug abuser in the village, who was so ill that the 
police wouldn't even bother with him, softened his attitude out of respect 
for us women and quit four months later," says a proud Kyin Mu Pu, who 
believes that any woman in the same situation should try her best to help 
her husband and children rather than give up on them.

During the toughest days of his struggle, when Kyin Mu Pu's husband turned 
to wine as a substitute for No 4, she took pains to look after him, buying 
and preparing healthy food to supplement his nutritional needs.

Now, her 52-year-old husband, who used to have to pause four or five times 
while walking just 20 metres, sometimes has enough energy to play 
basketball. He also assisted his wife in getting their sons off drugs.

The story of Kyin La Rung is even

more incredible. The 37-year-

old man had been on drugs for 11 years, since 1988, and was sent to a 
labour camp and prison twice for drug abuse and theft. After he was 
released from the labour camp, he soon picked up his habit again.

Desperate for drugs, the "resourceful" man rented out all 1.6 hectares of 
the land he owned for 576 yuan (US$72) a year, then spent the money on a 
tractor, which he used for trafficking drugs and stealing livestock. His 
land-lease contract doesn't expire until 2006.

"Sometimes he would force me to buy drugs for him. If I refused, he would 
beat me. In despair, I contemplated divorce, but I refrained because of our 
two young daughters," says his wife, Pyrai My Dyro, who is eight years his 
junior and had to do odd jobs to support their children.

In 2001, the anti-drug team delivered an ultimatum to Kyin La Rung and 
other addicts to get off drugs within 15 days.

"I didn't believe those women could make it happen at first. But seeing 
them, including my wife, patrolling the village every day, I felt I would 
be damned if I didn't quit," says the talented young man who composed a 
song while serving time in prison to persuade others not to make the same 
mistake he did and to stay away from drugs forever.

He shut himself up alone at a relative's home on the hill in a last ditch 
effort to get off heroin.

"When I was tormented by the desire to take drugs, I replaced No 4 with 
opium and gradually reduced the amount over time."

He is now a member of the task force and talks about his own experience 
with narcotics to persuade others from abusing drugs.

"I've been on the team for almost eight months. Every night I depart with 
my wife for the patrol," says a clean and contented Kyin La Rung.

The monumental efforts of the anti-drug team, now expanded to 57 members 
including six men, have paid off - there are no more drug addicts in the 
village. But the patrol work goes on. "We have to ensure that drugs never 
come into the village again," says Kyin Mu Pu.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart