General

Drug abuse: Why 80% kids in Delhi’s Seemapuri turn addicts, some as young as 7

July 4, 2017

International Day Against Drug Abuse: Peer pressure, family history, involvement in jobs like rag picking and segregation, easy accessibility found to be most common factors leading to addiction in this east Delhi locality; study ordered by Juvenile Justice Board.

A study on drug abuse among residents of northeast Delhi’s Seemapuri has revealed that at least 80% of the children surveyed in the slum are addicts.

The Society for the Promotion of Youth and Masses (SPYM) that conducted the study following an order by the Juvenile Justice Board found that children as young as seven started abusing drugs in this rural locality.

The study was ordered after six cases of juveniles addicted to drugs indulging in crime were registered in Seemapuri. It points out that most of the parents knew that their children were consuming drugs. But they were either helpless or unperturbed by the problem. The residents of the neighbourhood are mostly addicted to ganja (marijuana), smack (heroin), beer or tobacco.

The findings of the study underlined some of the common factors that often led to addiction — peer pressure, family history, involvement in jobs like rag picking and segregation and easy accessibility.

“A small corner of the city throw up such numbers. There is an immediate need for a study for the entire city to know the extent of drug use. In the national capital, children are easily accessing drug and abusing them,” said Shibendu Bhattacharjee, programme manager of SPYM.

June 26 is observed as International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking.

Bhattacharjee, along with 120 field surveyors of Delhi Legal Service Authority (DLSA), formed nine teams and carried out mapping of Old and New Seemapuri areas, where they also indentified hotspots.

In total, there were 1,414 respondents interviewed from different age groups — between 7-40 years.

The NGO has submitted its study result to the juvenile justice board and the court is likely to issue a fresh order next week.