China's first bill on drug control will forbid drug-rehab
centers from physically punishing or verbally humiliating drug
addicts.
The draft anti-drug law, which is under review at a top
legislature session, requires drug-rehab centers to take protective
measures when drug addicts try to hurt themselves.
The centers should pay drug addicts for work they do, demands
the bill.
The draft law, the first specifically designed to crack down on
drug trafficking, advocates non-discriminatory environments for
people undergoing rehabilitation with regard to access to
education, employment and social security support.
"Drug takers are law violators, but they are also patients and
victims. Punishment is needed, but education and assistance are
more important," Zhang Xinfeng, Vice Minister of Public Security,
said in a briefing to lawmakers of the Standing Committee of the
National People's Congress.
Adopting a more humanitarian approach to drug takers, the law
will allow many of them to recover in their communities, rather
than being confined to drug-rehab centers as is the case now.
The bill stipulates that drug-rehab centers would only admit
frequent intravenous drug takers, people who refuse community
assistance or fail in community corrections, and those who live in
communities without correction resources.
Rehabilitation centers will be organized to serve people of
different ages, gender, and addictive conditions, with abuse and
humiliation strictly banned.
The number of drug takers grew 35 percent in the five years
since 2000 to hit 1.16 million in early 2005, according to police
data. Police estimate that China has more than 700,000 heroin
addicts, 69 percent of whom are under the age of 35.
(Xinhua News Agency August 24, 2006)