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Opinion

Booming crack use challenges progressive Swiss drug strategy

FOREIGN COMMENT - Agnes Pedrero - Agence France-Presse

A boom in cheap crack cocaine is posing challenges to Switzerland's permissive drug strategy, not least to Geneva's safe injection rooms.

Behind Geneva's main railway station, a lime-green container structure called Quai 9 offers a space where people can legally shoot up, inhale, or sniff drugs under medical supervision.

The site has more than two decades of experience in handling and supporting hard drug users.

But it has been unable to deal with a sudden surge in the use of crack: a cheap cocaine derivative which can cause paranoia, and aggressive and violent behavior.

The boom has triggered rampant insecurity, forcing Quai 9 to temporarily close its "shoot-up room" to crack users.

"We have been open for 20 years, working with heroin and injected cocaine, but crack has caused us some difficulties," said Olivier Stabile, who works with the Premiere Ligne (Front Line) association that runs Quai 9.

"We couldn't ensure the safety of the other drug users, and we preferred to take a little break," he told AFP.

$10 hits

The use of crack, a highly addictive drug with dire health impacts, has been surging in several European countries in recent years.

In Geneva, the boom really took off in late 2021 as the COVID-19 lockdown period ended, with consumption doubling in 2022, according to regional authorities.

Observers point to the emergence of small, ready-made doses which suddenly became widely available at record low prices of around $10.

But that means users are seeking out $10 hits "around every 15 minutes", David Perrin, a social health worker with Premiere Ligne, told AFP, adding that the constant hunt for cash was synonymous with violence.

Wary of the risks posed by crack users, Quai 9 nonetheless remains intent on providing support.

While waiting for the authorities to find a solution for safely welcoming crack users back into the shoot-up room, Quai 9 has set up a night-time watch system.

Once a week, Premiere Ligne volunteers patrol the areas where users hang out, handing out water, energy bars, and clean crack pipes, which are aimed at helping reduce the transmission of diseases like hepatitis C.

"It's crucial," a crack user who only gave his name as Alvin told AFP.

"They take care of the young people, the social rejects," he said, stressing that "the human contact is essential".

The Geneva University Hospital has also set up a daytime watch system, with nurses going around to check on crack users.

Change of approach

Quai 9 was set up in 2001, less than a decade after Switzerland began moving away from penalizing drug addicts and introduced one of the world's most progressive drug policies.

The shift was aimed at reining in an out-of-control drug scene that emerged in Zurich and other Swiss cities the 1980s, with people injecting heroin out in the open.

The new approach, which treated users as people needing help rather than delinquents, included safe injection sites and the dispensing of heroin.

Addicts coming with their own doses can obtain injection equipment, under the government's "four-pillar" policy: prevention, therapy, harm reduction, and repression.

The policy has paid off, earning international recognition. Annual overdose deaths in Switzerland have plunged from more than 400 in the early 1990s to below 150 in recent years.

And the Swiss have broadly supported the strategy.

Electroshock

But the crack boom is creating tensions in Geneva, with residents upset over strung-out drug users filling the streets outside Quai 9.

"Until now, Quai 9 was seen in a positive light in the neighborhood... Now, with the swelling use of crack, some see it as the source of trouble", lamented Paula Quadri Sanchez, a Premiere Ligne social worker.

Increased crack use has resulted in more street dealing, insecurity, prostitution, and other disturbances in the neighborhood, forcing Quai 9 to request a greater police presence around the center.

Closing Quai 9 to crack users was a real "electroshock" for the authorities, Pierre Maudet, in charge of health policy in the canton of Geneva, told AFP.

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