Session 14 - Drug
use: Regional Epidemiology [<
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b) Towards the infinite beat
Nora Stojanovic
Healthy Options Project Skopje
(HOPS), Kapan An Lokal br 3, Skopje 91000, Macedonia. Phone
no: +389 – 91 130 038
The first drug
research undertaken in Macedonia was in 1995 and was connected
to the heroine epidemic. Carried out by a student, it was
called ‘Atomic Music’ and was the only club and drug research
available. This research has influenced the problematic drug
scene in Macedonia.
This club drug
scene is becoming extremely popular and widespread, mainly
among young people. The drugs that are being used are of poor
quality. Marijuana is the most popular drug, used by about
90%, and then ecstasy and LSD. The quality of ecstasy is very
bad since there is no testing and it comes mainly from a local
laboratory in Bulgaria. The tablets contain mostly amphetamine,
not MDMA. Marijuana, which is widely used, is grown using
pesticides and other chemicals in order to gain certain effects
when it is consumed. Poor quality drugs are also consumed
in Macedonia’s many prisons.
It is very interesting
and important to make some kind of categorisations regarding
age, gender and the ethnic background of drug users. Adolescents
are one of the most difficult to reach populations involved
in high-risk behaviour. They are also one of the most vulnerable
populations within the whole drug using population. They have
no knowledge regarding different types of drugs and harm associated
with their use. In comparison to the dynamics of the drug
using scene, there is little time to develop experience and
skills that will enable adolescent beginners to balance the
factors that can affect their lives.
Most of the answers
given by the adolescent participants in our study reveal a
basic ignorance of the existing scene, the drugs and drugs
related harm. ‘Street Mates’ have been playing a crucial role
in building up attitudes in relation towards drugs and drug
use phenomena. They are still playing a crucial role in building
up parallel systems of values and information that serve drug
users as a basis for developing individual skills. Therefore
‘Street Mates’ are helping drug users to sustain and survive
on the drug using scene, but they are also educating them
about unwanted risk and harm. One of the roles of the older
and more experienced drug users is a crucial factor of initialising
and guiding the youngsters into the drug-using scene. Stigmatisation
is closely related to mystification about the drug phenomenon.
Threats and dangers related to drug use are usually blown
up to enormous proportions, and are often inherited from the
drug image of previous years. Police intervention, stigmatisation
in the media and general opinion have major effects
on the drug-using population, which as a result has become
completely hidden.
Perspectives
from the club scene
"It is
a sub-cultural thing. We have our own rhythm, beat and our
own lifestyle so we can live easily, because people are always
under pressure from society. There is always the need for
people to choose. In the beginning, the scene was very small.
…. There is evidence of changing attitudes towards trouble
in places where people feel free from social restraints. Everything
was naïve and innocent. The purpose of drug use was to
expand mind consciousness, to have experiences. These things
were supposed to count at the time, but as the scene grew
other people came along. Some people said, "Something
is not working in our society, especially for young people.
Most people do not understand and are so ignorant."
"Looking
at the scene from the outside, most people have heard about
the ‘house’ or ‘techno’ scene from newspapers. Most of them
think that in general it is music produced by computers for
drug freaks. They have no idea what it is, how it is made
or who is visiting these parties, because they haven’t had
the chance to read anything positive. It is sickening because
the press have a bad attitude towards the whole thing. There
are not that many people in Macedonia who are involved in
‘house’ and ’techno’ music and they should be allowed to stand
for something else other than just music and drugs. There
are too many bad drugs involved in this culture as a whole,
not just the ‘house’ scene. Most kids from the age of 15 or
16 are taking what they call ‘ecstasy’, but it is not real
MDMA. They take this intensively for one or two years and
then they move onto other drugs. There is no information about
any of the different kinds of drugs in Macedonia. Furthermore,
club owners themselves are not very well informed about the
club drugs."
"Since 1991 we have
developed the dance scene in our clubs. Quite a few DJs are
doing really well…..But after 10 years the ideology of the
‘summer of love’ and the ‘flower power’ revival in the late
1980s and early 1990s was starting to vanish. Like in the
1960s, when in the beginning people really believed in the
ideology, over the years the scene began to become commercialised
and people don’t really know anymore why they are taking recreational
drugs. On Friday or Saturday they just take as many pills
as possible. It is difficult to find caring people who are
in clubs. People who are caught with a few joints finish up
in jail with bigger sentences, whereas people caught with
a few kilos of heroin are walking the streets freely. People
are not very satisfied with the way things are developing
and they would like to escape, but they will not find what
they are looking for in Sweden, Germany or in Poland. I decided
to come back and do my part in developing the ‘techno’ scene."
This is a picture of what is going
on in clubs in Macedonia. It shows movements that are important
in reflecting or influencing the scene. There is a very rich, beautiful
culture with the ideology of peace, love, unity and respect, that
is trying to survive underground. However, there is still a lot
of research and information to be gathered about what is going on
in the clubs of Macedonia.
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