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		Sierra Leone declared an emergency over a powerful synthetic drug but 
		women were left behind
		[April 05, 2025] 
		By CAITLIN KELLY 
		FREETOWN, Sierra Leone (AP) — At a vast landfill in Sierra Leone 's 
		capital of Freetown, smoke billows over decades of decomposing waste. 
		Zainab sits there, squinting through the soot. It is her usual spot for 
		buying kush, a cheap synthetic drug ravaging young people in the 
		country.
 “This kush is so addictive," she said. "If I don’t smoke, I feel sick.”
 
 Her current home, a shack of corrugated iron, contains only a tattered 
		mattress where she brings her clients as a sex worker. She uses her 
		income to sustain her drug addiction.
 
 She is one of many women in Sierra Leone who, as a result of social 
		factors that include living conditions and stigma, have not benefited 
		from intervention efforts after the government a year ago declared a 
		public health emergency over rampant kush abuse. The declaration was 
		meant to enforce criminal, public health and prevention measures to 
		reverse the trend in Sierra Leone, as kush spreads to other parts of 
		West Africa. The drug has been seized in Gambia, Senegal and Guinea.
 
 Public health emergency over kush
 
 While officials say kush has become scarcer on the streets in Sierra 
		Leone, critics say programs are still underfunded and inadequate.
 
 Despite new criminal, public health and prevention measures, only about 
		300 people have gone through the country’s official rehab program, 
		according to available data. Most have been men.
 
 Women have been less visible in the crisis. Rights groups say they are 
		historically left out.
 
 Only one in 18 women with drug use disorders receive treatment compared 
		to one in seven men, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and 
		Crime. The agency said women are usually more vulnerable to gender-based 
		violence, economic discrimination and human rights violations.
 
 Fewer women receive help
 
 The situation is not so different in Sierra Leone where various advocacy 
		groups spoke about how women are not as visible as men in coming forward 
		to receive support and often do not get adequate help. Far more men, 
		though, use drugs compared to women, experts say.
 
		
		 
		Zainab said five years of smoking Kush has brought shame and isolation. 
		She said no one has helped her, and spoke about days she gets so high 
		that “I did not know what was happening around me.”
 But she wants to stop for her children. One night while at work, flames 
		engulfed their home with the two infants inside. They survived, but she 
		entrusted them to an orphanage, haunted by the fire.
 
 “I would love to hear my children call me mummy again,” she said, her 
		scarred face breaking into a smile.
 
 Kush is a depressant. Its short, intense effect often leaves users 
		senseless. Symptoms of addiction range from sores to psychosis. Liver, 
		kidney and respiratory problems are common.
 
 Kush is difficult to combat
 
 The drug's evolving composition, low cost and widespread availability 
		make it difficult to combat in Sierra Leone, one of the world’s poorest 
		countries. A recent report from the Global Initiative Against 
		Transnational Organized Crime earlier this year found that nearly half 
		of kush samples tested contained opioids up to 25 times stronger than 
		fentanyl. The drug's content were largely unknown before now, hindering 
		response efforts, experts noted.
 
 Kadiatu Koroma with the local Women for Women Foundation nonprofit said 
		her organization has seen a rise in drug use among women and girls in 
		recent years.
 
 “When they are very drowsy … men will just come and take advantage,” she 
		said. Left vulnerable after using the drug, the women “are impregnated 
		and they don’t even know the men who did it.”
 
		25 strains of the drug
 At Sierra Leone's Kissy Psychiatric Hospital, health workers described 
		encountering 25 different strains of the drug in the wider Freetown 
		area.
 
 In one of two female wards, nurse Kadiatu Dumbuya said 90% of kush 
		addicts she has attended to during her six years in the hospital have 
		"sold their body” to feed the habit.
 
		
		 
		[to top of second column] | 
            
			 
            Rubbish pickers walk in the Kingtom landfill in Freetown, Sierra 
			Leone, Thursday, March 13, 2025, a place where addicts meet the 
			cartel that provides them with Kush. (AP Photo/Caitlin Kelly) 
            
			 And yet, among the 50 people — 
			majority of whom are kush users — who filed into one of Sierra 
			Leone’s two government-run rehab centers on a recent day, only three 
			were women.
 Only 300 people have accessed the seven-week program at the Hasting 
			Military Center since it opened in February 2024, guarded by the 
			military and surrounded by barbed wire. Just 40 of the beneficiaries 
			are women.
 
 Officials say the program is gender-sensitive, with men and women 
			separated by a fence. However, staff said stigma and family pressure 
			mean women often deny their addictions and refrain from seeking 
			support.
 
 A drop in the ocean
 
 “In most cases, we have 10% of girls that come to our attention. 
			That doesn’t mean the girls aren’t addicts … they feel shy in their 
			communities,” said Ansu Konneh, who works with the Sierra Leone's 
			Ministry of Social Welfare.
 
 “It is a drop in the ocean,” he says.
 
 Due to funding challenges, an ‘ambassador’ program for recovered 
			addicts from the center has stalled, and admissions were halted for 
			five months. When it resumed, some of the parents on the 2,000 
			person-long waiting list said their children had died.
 
 Among those desperate for help was Melda Lansana, who said she 
			visited the ministry several times to secure a rehab spot for her 
			18-year-old daughter, Khadija.
 
 “When I was taking it, I couldn’t wash, I couldn’t take care of 
			myself,” Khadija said, recalling the relief of the days spent in the 
			center last August.
 
 Without money for school, she struggles to get her life on track. 
			Due to family tensions, she has chosen to live “on the streets” with 
			her boyfriend.
 
 She vows she’s clean. Her mother suspects she’s still using.
 
 Funding challenges slow progress
 
 Progress against kush is slow, much like other parts of the world 
			where the fight against synthetic drugs is often difficult.
 
 Officials acknowledge the government has struggled to provide 
			livelihood or business support to ease reintegration, particularly 
			for beneficiaries without formal education - a step advocates say 
			would help women.
 
 Last year's emergency declaration, lauded by civil society, has 
			helped shift the approach from punishment to care but the response 
			is only "65% of what it should be,” said Habib Kamara, director of 
			the Social Linkages For Youth Development And Child Link, a local 
			nonprofit involved in the fight against drug use.
 
 The organization is one of the few that have offered targeted 
			support to female users, especially to vulnerable populations like 
			sex workers, through community peer support, free family planning 
			and beauty sessions to help build confidence.
 
 “We have to meet the women where they are,” Kamara said.
 
 Marie Kamara, 19, rejected kush for another drug - Tramadol, which 
			experts have warned is also dangerous. She saw kush as too risky and 
			was put off by her friends' stench and oozing sores.
 
 One night, she said, she and her friend Yabu were chased by a kush 
			dealer. Marie escaped. Yabu didn’t.
 
 “They raped her … just because of kush,” Marie said.
 
			
			 Months later, Yabu died from the effects of the drug, Marie said — 
			her second friend lost to kush.
 “Let me not die like them," Marie said. "I pray.”
 
			
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