<div class="gmail_quote">CAN ANYBODY HELP WITH SOME ADVICE?</div>
<div class="gmail_quote">Claudio</div>
<div class="gmail_quote"><br>From: <b class="gmail_sendername">Bro.Ronald Drahozal C.S.C</b> <span dir="ltr"><a href="mailto:apon@citechco.net">apon@citechco.net</a></span><br><br>
<div>Greetings---</div>
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<div>I get phm-exchange material and read a good bit of it. At times the thought comes to me if PHM has any information-on or if you are even aware of a situation in Bangladesh that I am very concerned about and therefore very interested in doing something about----and am doing what little I can.</div>
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<div>Here in Dhaka, Bangladesh I have been working with drug addicts for over 22 years. Although American by birth I am now also a Bangladeshi citizen who came here 48 years ago as a teacher. </div>
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<div>My concern are the estimated 250-300,000 street children in Dhaka alone---many/ most are addicted to something---surely cigarettes, video games and a very large proportion to sniffing glue, sleeping tablets(defensive--if caught and beaten when stealing they do not feel the pain), marijuana, alcohol, etc. Drugs are my concern---but many of the present street children drug addicts will continue to live on the street (if they do not die, go to prison, return home, etc.) and will in time be street adults. At present in what is referred to as Central Dhaka there are street adults, some of whom were street children, now IDU and 10% +/- HIV Positive.</div>
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<div>Now these street children drug addicts---potential street adults HIV Positive slash and share blades and blood to be "blood friends" ; some are IDUs and share needles, etc. BUT the Global Funds, USAID funded projects, etc. have loads of money but there is a gap in who they cover----this gap is NOT by race, religion, gender, etc. BUT THIS GAP IS BY AGE. These international programs are restricted by donors-----USAID for example, that have an age limit----over 18 years of age. So I have been serving street drug addicts in Bangladesh----the only such centre in the whole country, for many years now but cannot find any donors to help support what I am doing because even Save the Children admits that although they have Children in their title, they do not have any funds for street children drug addicts/ IDUs. </div>
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<div>These children have a basic human right to good health--including effective treatment and rehabilitation for the sickness of drug addiction---which could help these street children from becoming street adult IDUs and HIV Positive. <br>
<br>Now what can be done? How do I find support for these children denied their basic human right to good health including effective rehabilitation for the sickness of drug addiction? I have never turned away a single drug addict in my 22 years of serving them because he/she could not pay a single paisa/cent, etc. but it is a constant struggle to provide them residential rehabilitation care including primary education and skill training---some do not even know where the family they ran away from lives now; some will not return home because of a step-mother; some have some contact with family but have lived on the streets using drugs for so long that they cannot adjust to life where they were born (I do not say home----most of them feel more at home on the street than with those who gave them life).</div>
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<div>They want to stay free of drugs but if they return to the street very few are able to stay free of drugs very long----some have been on the streets so long they do not remember how long, some who come to us are 7-8 and have used drugs for years. But these children can not get their human right to good health including effective rehabilitation anyplace except at APON.</div>
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<div>What do I do? The HIV experts agree with me---but they must follow the rules of the donors----nobody legally can get help below the age of 18. I do not have a program for male adult addicts under such a program so I cannot even help these boys in such a program illegally. </div>
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<div>We have separate rehab program for male and females. Among the usual 120 or so residents are 40-45 boys/ youngsters ages 7-8 to 15-16. Of these 120----around half pay little or nothing so we constantly struggle to provide drug addicts of all social-economic status, gender and age their basic human right to good health----but..............</div>
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<div>You may say---this is not your line of concern----Is it possible to include this problem in your line of concern? Money is a problem---but actually the main problem here is---first that even after 2-3 years of telling everybody about the problem, some agree, it is beginning to be included in some policy statements but nobody I know has money to put their talk into walk/ action. </div>
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<div>Bro. Ronald Drahozal, CSC<br><br>APON (Addiction Rehabilitation Residence) <br>APONGAON<br><br></div></div>