For decades I have been
agonizing the unprecedented profusion of the
narcotic drug Qaad or Khat. It also carries
a series of other names such as kat, miraa,
kangetti as well as its Latin name Katha
Edulis. To the Somalis, it is simply Qaad
and a drug of choice
| It was
an American ambassador in Mogadishu
who told a Reuters correspondent
that Qaad was Somalia's choice of
drug and it could be as hazardous as
cocaine or hash. |
|
 |
Yet,
less than two decades ago, Qaad was
not as readily available, or even
known in the South as is the case
currently, where even kids as young
as 10 or 12 years old openly chew
the drug as they engage each other
in running battles in the streets of
the smoking ruins of the capital. |
Qaad is grown in Yemen,
Ethiopia and Kenya's Meru district and is
flown daily to Somalia by a fleet of light
aircraft piloted by bush pilots who could
outfox the notorious Australian bush pilots.
It is chewed as stimulant and a source of a
variety of symptoms, including insomnia,
lack of appetite, impotence and transitory
euphoria, and in some cases despair and
paranoia. Addicts would do anything,
including murder and home invasion to dig up
money with which to buy the drug in order to
mollify their cravings.
Khat is illegal in North
America, but cities with sizeable Somali
population, such as Minneapolis, Minnesota,
it is sold and chewed behind closed doors.
Recently the State police impounded a haul
of Qaad with street value of millions of
dollars. Barely a week later five young
Somalis murdered a woman allegedly selling
the drug at her home in Minneapolis.
According to a police spokesperson there are
indications that this hitherto unknown drug
in the United States have almost reached
alarming proportion, especially among the
youngsters, and it is no longer classified
as "soft drug."
"Community leaders abdicated their
responsibilities to warn the young people
about the dangers of drugs," the police
spokesperson bemoaned.
Closer to home, it is
estimated eighty per cent of the youths
countrywide are hooked to the drug. In 1990
Unicef, the children's organization, in its
global drugs and substance abuse statistics
forecast a frightening crisis, which it said
poses a major threat to the well-being of
young people in Somalia, dwarfing all
efforts to import food and other basic
necessities, following man-made and natural
disasters.
Kenya earns more than 50
million dollars for exporting to Somalia the
much preferred Kangetti variety and
cigarettes alone, that's to a country where
people are reeling from the scarcity of
food, medicine and clean drinking water.
Ironically, it is estimated that only 3
per-cent of the Kenyans themselves chew Qaad,
mostly in Meru district where the plant is
grown and at the Coast Province, where the
majority of the inhabitants are of Arab
descendants.
| "We
import death and disease from Kenya
and export the last trace of our
fauna and flora to the oil rich
Arabs," a reporter from the
French news agency (AFP) quoted a
Somali doctor at the old Digfer
General Hospital. |
|
Heavily armed gangs, or
"Mooryaan" as they are known
control more than a dozen makeshift
airstrips owned by powerful Mogadishu
warlords in connivance with local merchants
sometimes called Qaad and Cigarettes Barons.
Some of these warlords and merchants are now
key members of the new cabinet headed by
Prime Minister Ali Mohamed Gheddi with the
full blessing of President Abdullahi Yusuf
Ahmed and the federal parliament-in-exile.
The integrity of the other cabinet members
is also in question. In short, some of them
have very poor track records and do not
deserve to hold a ministerial portfolio.
A scene from hell occurs
when a new cargo of Qaad and Cigarettes
arrive at the airstrips when impatient
peddlers try to force their way past the
hired Mooryaan. In this way many people died
in the stampede. Others are treated at the
already cash-strapped hospitals, and with
not more than bandages. Eyewitnesses say
gangs of freelancers, forcing many peddlers
to surge ahead and try to reach the cargo,
usually create the chaos.
In many instances the bush
pilots hastily take off before the cargo was
discharged to save their own lives, but the
freelancers try to shoot down the aircraft
in vain as most of the CESSNAS to Somalia
are now bulletproofed.
Humanitarian agencies that
tried to use the airstrips have been
threatened with death unless they shell out
disproportionate landing fees and hire
private gunmen as bodyguards and
four-wheel-drive Toyota pick ups, or else…
GRAVY TRAINS
"A quick tour at
these airstrips will tell you why they
proved to be a gravy train for the
warlords," said Abdi Egeh, a
Somali-Canadian who paid a short visit in
Mogadishu after an absence of 15 years. He
said the chief of the Mooryaan at the
airstrip is a man of all trades and master
of all. He is the immigration, customs, the
treasurer and the police chief, all in one,
and his word is final. "But the guy has
very short fuse," Abdi said.
A former officer of the
collapsed Somali National Army, he makes no
secret of his belief that the country does
not need a government with its red tape and
colossal bureaucratic bottleneck. Like his
masters, he believes that Somalia should
remain the world's only privatized state,
and makes certain the warlord's coffer is
never empty.
"The US dollar, and
in some cases the Euro and the Saudi Rial,
is your passport, visa and custom's
clearance certificate, period. No question
is asked and nothing to declare virtually at
all the airstrips scattered across the city.
Apparently it is a country where anyone
could come in and get out at will, "
Abdi said.
Apart from the Qaad and
cigarette importers, the arms traffickers
are potential bonanza for the owners of the
airstrips. Thousands of dollars change hands
every day, which inspired wannabe warlords
to launch their own airstrips around the
city.
Due to lack of income
generating sources, Qaad peddling has
assumed a legal status even when there was a
government in the 1970s and 1980s. Now,
larger number of pushers, including young
boys and women who lost their husbands in
the civil war peddle and invaded every
neighbourhood. In some instances, up to ten
peddlers can be operating the same zone,
Hodan, for example. Former policemen are
known to double as private bodyguards and
Qaad and cigarette peddlers. As a result
there's Qaad glut in the city. It is a
cutthroat business.
Trouncing all efforts to
import food and other basic necessities
following natural and man-made disasters,
Qaad has emerged as the real vanquisher and
I very much doubt if any government would be
able to step in to curtail its proliferation
in the foreseeable future. They will have
more than enough to do for a hundred year;
just putting together what the warlords has
destroyed.
Who is to blame for this
threat to our society? Mainly religious
leaders, clan elders, civic society, health
workers, intellectuals and the media for
failing to step in time to curb the
widespread of this poison in the country in
the first place. I cannot for the life me
understand why my colleagues in the local
media (most of them are no neophytes) failed
to blow the Qaad menace sky high. They
deliberately let the people down by keeping
silent. Evidently, this is another rush to
Armageddon and that something must be done
before it is too late.
By M.M. Afrah©2004
Afrah95@hotmail.com
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