Is the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict Causing Drug Problems?

12/4/09  Print This Post Print This Post    4 Comments      Written by Christine Garvin
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The Hamas government has decided to impose stricter rules on those caught smuggling drugs.

Photo: Creativity103

Things don’t look good for those who get caught bringing drugs into the Gaza Strip.

With nearly a third of the 300 prisoners in the main jail in Gaza detained due to drug offenses, a 10-year sentence is apparently not enough of a “deterrent for this lucrative trade,” at least according to Hamas and this article on Haaretz.com.

While Mexico legalized small amounts of pot and other narcotics in the “War on Drugs”, Hamas has decided to impose hard labor and the possibility of the death penalty on those caught smuggling drugs in through tunnel trade. It seems the tunnel trade in and of itself is officially sanctioned by Hamas as a way of defying Israel’s blockade, but it is much harder to control the flow of goods than through a normal customs process.

Recently seized contraband include washing machines full of hash and the Opiate pain-killer Tramadol. Ecstasy is another popular drug with the young, and ends up being sold in high schools.

It seems drug smuggling has surged in the past few months, or “increased alarmingly” to quote the article. Why could this be? Anything to do with the daily warfare and struggle for survival that both the Israelis and Palestinians must face? Hmmm.

Survival Instinct

When you take away people’s ability to live a safe and secure life, they are going to do their best to get to a safe and secure place (or forget where they are altogether). Even the article notes:

Tramadol has been a big seller…among those of the population of 1.5 million who have found solace in drugs from after Israel’s three-week military onslaught last January, launched to stop Hamas firing rockets into Israel.

Though they are also sure to add: “The motivations of some drug-users are also banal: to banish boredom, improve concentration or for sexual enjoyment.” Ok, yes, that’s a given in any culture.

But along with the fact that the need to mentally escape is inevitable, there is also the tiny issue of excruciatingly high rates of unemployment and poverty rates in the Gaza (this article puts them at 50%). Where there is poverty, drugs will be sold, if only for monetary purposes. Really, it’s survival on both the economic and psychological fronts.

So, they’re gonna stop smugglers with the possibility of the death penalty. Good idea. Aren’t most people there facing that on a daily basis anyway?

Do you think taking a harsher approach to drug smuggling will work? Share your thoughts below.


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About the Author

Christine Garvin

Christine Garvin is a certified Nutrition Educator and holds a MA in Holistic Health Education. She is co-editor of Brave New Traveler and founder/editor of Living Holistically...with a sense of humor. When she is not out traveling the world, she is busy writing, doing yoga, and performing hip-hop and bhangra. She also likes to pretend living in her hippie town of Fairfax, CA is like being on vacation.

4 Comments... join the discussion!

  • joshua johnson replied on December 4, 2009

    Just one more stupid, flailing example to solve a “problem” by dealing with a symptom of the problem and not the actual problem itself.
    The “war on drugs” is ripe with these tactics, that is why it will always fail.
    In a world of governmental prescription pimps and sky-scraping alcohol related deaths, I can’t take the moral efforts of our superiors seriously, not for one instant.

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  • Buzzy replied on December 6, 2009

    Does rehashing an article previously published in a major daily newspaper (Israel’s Ha’aretz) pass for original material here?

    And really, the title! The Israeli-Palestinian conflict has been going on for nearly 100 years — and suddenly it is “causing a drug problem”?

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    • Christine Garvin replied to Buzzy on December 11, 2009

      Buzzy, I “rehashed” the article in order to highlight the fact that the continuation of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict goes deeper for people than simply living in a war zone, which people who don’t live in one have a hard time fully comprehending what it means in terms of survival and mental health.

      I think more people in the West understand not only the desire, but the ultimate need for drugs in order to escape whatever trying place they find themselves in, and THAT humanity can provide a better understanding of what people experience on the Gaza Strip.

      Yes, it has been going on for 100 years and yes, it is NOW causing a drug problem because of the sudden influx of the availability of drugs. Other coping mechanisms were present before (including some drugs, but not to the extent they are now), but this one adds another layer of probable death and destruction.

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  • Adam Ehad replied on December 7, 2009

    I agree with Joshua Johnson! A truly wise man. And I must congratulate the matador reading public on their restraint for not immediately wading in with every Tom, Dick and Harry’s take on the Israel/Palestine problem.

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