Off the wire
Kenya says extra drug tests ahead of Rio Olympics discriminatory  • Roundup: More than 160 militants give up fighting in northern Afghanistan as military pressure intensifies  • Urgent: 5.1-magnitude earthquake hits parts of Pakistan  • Rudisha says Kenya faces selection crisis for Rio Olympics  • Spotlight: Putin eyes closer partnership with China along Silk Road and beyond  • Aussie basketball star set to employ bodyguard at Rio Olympics  • China appreciates Russia's position on South China Sea issue  • Report: $10.6 billion in lost business in Mecca grand mosque expansion  • 700,000 instructed to evacuate as heavy rain continues to storm SW Japan  • Ginat Panda in Chengdu gives birth to first pigeon pair of the year  
You are here:   Home

People suffering from drug problems increase: UN drug report

Xinhua, June 23, 2016 Adjust font size:

People suffering from drug use disorders increased disproportionally from 27 million to 29 million for the first time in six years in the world, according to the 2016 World Drug Report released by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) on Thursday.

The report suggests that the overall impact of drug use in terms of health consequences continues to be devastating, with around 12 million people injecting drugs and 14 per cent of them living with HIV.

The topic of this year's report is the world drug problem and sustainable development, Yury Fedotov, executive director of UNODC, told Xinhua in an interview.

When faced with drug problem, it's important to take sustainable development into account, he said. For instance, some farmers in remote region grow opium, to bring down the opium production, alternative crops instead of opium should be found to sustain them.

The report also highlights a strong link between poverty and several aspects of the drug problem. The strong association between social and economic disadvantage and drug use disorders can be seen when analyzing different aspects of marginalization and social exclusion, such as unemployment and low levels of education. Endit