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Nearly all of the children are also addicts, said Abdul Bair Ibrahimi, the coordinator for child care at Sanja Amaj Women's Treatment Center. There are a number of 5- and 4-year-old addicts. The youngest they had was a 1-month-old infant. The Associated Press toured the center earlier this year and talked to a middle-aged woman who said she started using opium under the Taliban. "I lost my brothers during the fighting and life was miserable. My brother-in-law used opium. He saw me crying and suggested I try it," said Shirin Gul. Then, two years ago, a nephew came to live at her house who was a heroin addict and she switched to the harder drug. She was at the treatment facility for the second time, having relapsed. Her 15-year-old daughter, Gul Paris, was also being treated for heroin addiction. She said she started on the drug by stealing small amounts from her mother or brother. "I didn't know if it was bad for me or not," the girl said, sitting barefoot on a bed, wearing a blue gown and a lavender headscarf. She relapsed two months ago, she said, after her brother started using again. Treatment centers like Sanja Amaj are rare in Afghanistan. Only 10 percent of drug users surveyed had received any treatment, though 90 percent said they wanted treatment, according to the survey. The increasing drug use has already had destabilizing effects on communities, according to community leaders interviewed for the study. They said drug use had increased insecurity, theft and violence in their areas. It's unclear if the lower international price of opium in recent years has made dealers more likely push their product inside Afghanistan. U.S. drug czar Gil Kerlikowske, who toured the Sanja Amaj center in February. "Clearly, this is an expanding addictive population here in this country. It really doesn't matter to a drug dealer that the people becoming addicted are poor," Kerlikowske said. "If they become addicted, they'll find ways to pay for that drug."
[Associated
Press;
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