Tag: Temptation

  • If you are tempted

    If you are tempted

    Nigeria is a home of temptations. The agents of Satan are many and ubiquitous. They are most active in the sacred month of Ramadan. You will meet them in the neighbourhood, in offices, in commuter buses, in the markets and on the roads. Like Satanic rainbow, they come in various colours carrying with them all sorts of tempting arsenals. Some of them are men. Most are women.

    Their temptations come in different forms and shapes. Some will make jest of you in a provocative way. Some will deliberately bring food to your presence and start eating right in front of you. Some will pretend not to be aware that you are fasting and, therefore, offer you alcoholic drinks. Some women will tempt you with the most sensitive contours of their bodies. The powders on their faces and other cosmetic materials with which some of them are decorated alone are enough to disarm you spiritually if you are not a formidable type. Their antics are many. But your resistance to all these is the most vital ingredient for the acceptance of your fast by Allah. This is a situation in which Muslims are expected to close their eyes and their minds at the same time. They should close their eyes to any eyesore and close their minds to all spiritual irritants.

    Read Also; My wife, my band, sacrifices, by K1

    In no Islamic society can such temptations be experienced. In any sane Muslim society, it is a punishable offence to deliberately tempt or provoke fasting Muslims in the month of Ramadan. As a matter of fact, all food vendors and restaurants are statutorily prohibited from operating in the days of Ramadan. They can only trade in the nights. And of course, there is nothing like alcohol or nudism in such societies even outside the sacred month.

    Resistance to temptation in Ramadan is a function of two things: high level of discipline and strong faith in Allah. Any Muslim who lacks these two is surely bereft of the necessary armour against temptation. Ramadan in the life of a Muslim is like a delicious food given to a hungry man. If he handles it carelessly, it may end up in the belly of a goat. Satan is always on standby to snatch any reward accruing to pious Muslims from good deeds. To avoid becoming a victim of satanic machination therefore, do not be careless with Allah’s bounties for you in this sacred month.

    • RAMADAN KARIM!

  • Drug and substance misuse: Resist the temptation (4)

    Kidney may also fail in case of septicaemia. Brain damage may occur as I mentioned above. It may or may not be reversible.

    The person may become disfigured. Drug may affect a person’s fertility and ability to have children

    In women, who are pregnant, the child may be severely affected and may present as a “drug addict” at birth with craving or withdrawal symptoms. That may affect the child for life. This is commonly seen in alcoholic pregnant mothers. Some drugs my stiffen life out of the unborn child, especially in early pregnancy. Cigarette do damage the lungs of the new born.

    Nicotine in cigarette has been linked to cancers of the lungs and bladder and it has effect on other cancers such as breast cancer especially in women. Alcohol is known to cause or be associated with cancers and also contributing to many of such diseases in women and men. In short, alcohol misuse causes cancers.

     

     General effects

    Economic: Someone suffering any of the clinical effects cannot be described as being healthy. Certainly, productivity may diminish due to diseased state.  Business and work may suffer as a result. Cost of caring for the user and the loss in productivity will affect incomes. It may as a result affect career.  Many political aspirants who took drugs in teenage years have fallen by the way side later on in their political career.  In the least, they have had to explain to the public and possibly apologise for ever taking drugs in ignorance. Thus, drugs can affect future ambitions.

    School and education may suffer considerably. Many individuals have had their schooling cut short on the account of drugs misuse. I have clients now and in the past who had been impaired by alcohol, prescription drugs, cannabis and heroin with serious effects on their academic performance.

    Social and family: The impact of drug is widespread.First, it may affect the children who may copy the user. I have seen many spouses and relationship ruined because a partner introduced drug into the family and relationship.

    This may lead to disease states and fragmentation of the family.

    Legal effects and crimes: It has been proven beyond doubt that drugs misuse from alcohol to heroin and cocaine and indeed any form of drugs that distorts reality may aid commission of offence. Commission of offence may lead to imprisonment and or detention in mental health institution. The person may begin to act out of character. This may be the start of a trend in which there is drug use leading to crime and the beginning of the ruining of a life that started as a bright star.

    The situation of drug misuse in Nigeria

    Let us face it: with a lax rule of law in practice, poor infrastructure to support economic development, no social welfare benefits, wide disparity between the rich and poor and with 62  per cent of her people living below poverty line and per capital income recently risen to about $1200 (UNDP) and a teeming population of over N160M, Nigeria is essentially a drug-consuming and producing country.  Nigeria is also a significant transit and courier country.

    According to available public records,”former Chairman of NDLEA (National Drug Law Enforcement Agency), Alhaji Ahmadu Giade, described illicit drugs as “alien” to Nigeria. Cannabis, now locally grown in most states of the federation, was introduced to the country by foreigners. Ms Dagmar Thomas, the Country Representative of United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), says Nigeria was one of the largest cannabis growers in Africa, with over eight per cent of the population abusing cannabis. Yearly cannabis seizures increased from 126 metric tones in 2005 to 210 metric tones in 2007.

    The NDLEA describes the Southwest as one of the main centres of illicit drug production in the country. About 196.5 acres (0.795 km2) of cannabis farmland were discovered and destroyed in the region in 2008.

    Edo State has the highest rate of seizure of cannabis in the country. In April 2009, the NDLEA confiscated 6.5 tones of marijuana from the home of a man in Ogun State who claimed to be 114 years old. In September 2009, the NDLEA reportedly destroyed a 24-hectare Cannabis Plantation in a forest reserve in Osun State.

    In January 2009, the NDLEA publicly burned 5,605.45 kilogrammes of drugs seized from traffickers in the historic town of Badagry, Lagos.

    The bonfire included 376.45 kilogrammes of cocaine, 71.46 kilogrammes of heroin and 5,157.56 tonnes of cannabis in 2015… Between 2006 and June 2008, over 12,663 suspected drug dealers were arrested, with seizure of over 418.8 metric tonnes of various hard drugs.

    For example, in July 2009, a woman about to board a KLM flight at the Mallam Aminu Kano International Airport was arrested by NDLEA officers. She later excreted 42 wraps of cocaine, weighing 585 grammes.

    In September 2009, the NDLEA arrested a Guinean woman en route  Brazil to Europe with 6.350 kg of pure cocaine at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos.”

    Yet, about 20 percent of Nigerians are mentally unwell with drugs misuse contributing a significant proportion to the scourge of mental illness.

  • Drug and substance misuse: resist the temptation

    •Continued from last week…

    Poverty (and ignorance): As in (3) above, with unguided individuals who is poor, there is greater likelihood of alcohol misuse, nicotine misuse and cannabis. Heroin and cocaine appears to be the preserve of the rich though not exclusively.

    • Abuse of Prescription Drugs. As our definition clearly stated, any chemical can be abused be it prescription drugs or recreational drugs. Some individuals do suffer long standing and painful conditions. In such a state, some believes that taking more than what the doctor has prescribed would provide corresponding greater healing effect. In fact, the opposite may be true. It may cause considerable damage beyond what the user had ever contemplated. Yet, there are many people who out of ignorance, poverty or both refused to attend a medical consultation. Instead, they prefer going to the local chemist or pharmacy to get over the counter medications. Paracetamol or other pain killer as well as sleeping tablets belong to drugs that are frequently abused by the public. Abuse of over the counter drugs and prescribed medications are extremely dangerous. Illnesses are better handled by clinician and trained professionals.

    In similar situations, there are individuals who use drugs to “suppress” the effect of a disease. Cannabis, illegal as it is for example, is used by some in the belief that it helps the pain of chronic diseases. To be truthful, it is to this end that a prescribe-able form of cannabis has now developed.  Cannabis causes, depression and paranoia. Some mental health patients who ironically developed paranoia tend to believe that their depression and paranoia could get better by use of cannabis. The opposite is in fact true. It could and does get worse.

     

     Ways of using drugs?

    The ultimate aim of drug user is to get the drug to the brain: however it gets there.

    Therefore, the common routes are:

    • The mouth as in tablets such as ecstasy, various forms of preparation as in chewing of some of our traditional medicines. Some is taken as liquid as in alcohol and gas as in cigarette  and cannabis (also known as marijuana, skunk).
    • Through the nose as in cocaine sniffing.
    • Through the blood vessels (injection) as in heroin
    • It may also be through the vagina or anus as in drug courier and other shrewd users.

    How is drug presented? What does some of these drugs look like?

    • It can be in its natural form of leaves as in cannabis or heroin or cocaine as in coca
    • It can be in tablet forms as in LSD or ecstasy. It may look very innocent in presentation.
    • It may be in powder form as in cocaine powder which is often “white” in colour.
    • It may be in liquid form as in paint, petrochemicals and alcohol (ethanol). Some drugs such as cocaine and heroin may also be dissolved chemicals as a way to conceal their usage and carriage.
    • It may have been transformed by the barons in which case they may mix it with other products to disguise the real content of it.

     

    Effects of drug abuse

    Clinical:

    I will not be detailing the effects of each of these drugs. To do so will undoubtedly complicate the discussion. Suffice to say that the principal effect is that drugs of all classes interfere with the way the brain works. Drugs interfere with the thinking process, the data processing by the brain and the way the person perceives things from the environment and the way the person reacts to the environment.

    Drugs such as alcohol do also cause real and tangible damage to the substance of the brain which may lead to mental health diseases such as dementia.

    Ultimately, drugs can contribute to or lead to psychosis, schizophrenia, paranoia (undue suspicions), delusions, hallucinations (hearing of voices, seeing strange things, and feelings of unrealistic sensations on the body, smelling things that feel abnormal or unreal), mania and unreasonable euphoria. It may lead to distortion of reality. Drugs may cause or contribute to depression, panic attacks and anxiety and sleeplessness. The list is endless.

    Physical effects: The person abusing drugs may not now be well without the drugs (called addiction). He or she depends on it for daily “boost” (called dependence). If the person is injecting the drugs, it may leave marks on the skin. In fact this is probably the simplest effect.

    The person may contact infection such as AIDS/HIV/hepatitis especially if needles are being shared between drug users.  Substance misuse may also lead to other forms of less known infection that may kill the individual.  Septicaemia or blood poisoning may be what will ultimately kill the person.  I have seen someone, a drug user who developed abscess of the groin and had to have his leg and hip amputated as a result of what is known as osteomyelitis.   If death or other severe damage has not occurred, organ damage may occur such as liver disease for example: cirrhosis of the liver as in chronic alcohol misuseContinue from last week…

  • Drug and substance misuse: resist the temptation

    •Continued from last week…

    As we shall see below, there are lots of impacts of drug misuse on the society, friends and not the least the individual drug miser. In the least, it gives a certain community and nation a bad name and image. In neighbourhood where drug misuse is common, the image projected by the drug usage is clear for everyone to see. For example, the community is branded as drug misuser, crime rates are higher, unemployment is high, property and social development is such community are low. Drug misuse has serious impacts on the said community not to mention the serious implication on mental health.

     

    Drugs that are commonly misused/abused

    Strictly speaking, anything and any chemical can be abused. They range from tobacco (nicotine), alcohol, smoking tea (!), petrochemicals, paint, kerosene, to cannabis and to more serious ones like cocaine, heroin, LSD, ecstasy, magic mushrooms and many more. Just anything can be a drug. It may be common plants or cultural plants such as khat commonly used in Somalia and now used in the Western World. Probably the commonest drug of abuse is alcohol and nicotine (cigarette) and marijuana.

     

    Why do people abuse drugs?

    1) Lack of knowledge / Ignorance. The old saying that ignorance is a disease and that ignorance kills is ever so perfectly true as in drug misuse.  Most innocent people especially adolescents and children are introduced to drugs without them ever being aware of what they are getting into. The reasons are that:

    • Some parents do abuse their children: Parents who are on drugs (see above list of drugs but especially alcohol and nicotine) will most tacitly or directly introduce the drugs to their children. Children of course learn from parental habits or learn from the habits of guardian. They will simply pick up the behaviour.
    • The “mates” and friends effect: Hardly does it ever occur that anyone, for the first time and without prior knowledge of drugs, could walk along the street looking to buy heroin, cocaine or even alcohol. Someone must have first, introduced the substance to the person. This is where “mates” and friends come in. Pressure groups, in schools, streets, rave parties’ gives the drugs to the unwary, the easily led and innocent person who wants to “belong” to his mates or “be like them”.  In my clinical experience, this is how teenagers get into drugs. The “mates” often “market” the drugs as “happy” substance and asking the innocent person to try it.  On the other hands, the drugs may be marketed as helping users to be bold and less shy especially in approaching the opposite gender.
    •   Illegal administration/ criminal acts: Sometimes in parties and to the unwary, drugs may be put in drinks and food belonging to the victim who innocently takes the drugs. On other occasions, the drug may be presented as sweats or something pleasant that the victim may benefit from. Actually, in law, this is both an illegal administration of drugs and this act is seen as poisoning the victim.  This is what happens, sometimes between children and parents. It also occurs between “mates” or between opposite genders. Males may put rape drugs in drinks of a female whom the male intended to subdue for the purpose of rape when the drug had taken full effect. The victim being unaware takes the drink and subsequently get attacked.
    • Supposed pressure of life/ Desire to excel in life: There is a false belief that, using recreational drugs can give relief of some sort such as “stepping down” from a pressure of unemployment, family issues, pressurising job positions, career and school pressures: Relieve may indeed last for a while. Once it becomes a habit, the damage may have gone too far and beyond repair. So, taking illegal drugs is an escapist method of dealing with failures and pressures of life.  The desire to excel is linked to success. As I mentioned earlier, drug taking is almost always an act of cheating the rest of the society. This is the situation that occurs in sports and games. In the end, it does not pay to take performance enhancing drugs as we have witnessed with so many lives cut short, sport career banished, athletes are banned from games and money in the hands of drug misuser is filtered away.
    • Duress: If you are poor and you are looking for way out of it and you happen to fall into the wrong hands, you may be forced into the drug ring. In the first, you may actively be looking for the way out of your poverty. This can be by your voluntary action in which case you choose to be part of the drug team as either a courier and or a user. Of course, it makes loyalty sense that if you are going to be part of a team, you should show your commitment to the leadership by taking the drugs, somehow. The loyalty factor ties the drug courier and user to the baron. On the other hand, you may be actively recruited and be forced to take or carry drugs under the threat of death or any other harm In return couriers and users are promised a handsome reward. In the end, your action may lead to your mental health breakdown or you end up in prison or both. Continue from next week…
  • Drug and substance misuse: resist the temptation

    What is a drug?

    Part IV Section 44 of Nigeria’s National Drug Law Enforcement Agency, Act 1990 described and gave definitions to what constitute drugs and substances.

    In this article and to make things simple for us, I will look at drugs from two other definitions. The first definition is one that is within the confine of the professionals:

    • Under the USA Federal Law: A drug is:
    • any substance recognized in the official pharmacopoeia or formulary of the nation.
    • any substance intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease in humans or other animals.
    • any article, other than food, intended to affect the structure or any function of the body of humans or other animals.
    • any substance intended for use as a component of such a drug, but not a device or a part of a device.

    2)The American Heritage Science Dictionary defines “drug” as a chemical substance such as a narcotic or a hallucinogen that affects the central nervous system and is used recreationally for perceived desirable effects on personality, perception, or behaviour. Many recreational drugs are used illicitly and can be addictive.

     

    Uses of drugs

    From the above definition, we can see that, in fact, drugs actually have their good uses. They are intended to be used in certain ways such as for diagnosis (detecting) diseases, prevention of diseases, treatment of diseases in both human and animals. Drugs are also used to treat plant diseases.

    Drugs are chemical substances that are found in different parts of the world. What constitute a drug will also depend on how it’s used. Therefore, drugs can be just any substance. The important thing though is that, apart from food and water, it must affect and make changes to the body of the person taking the drug. These changes can be physical and it can be mental.  Drugs are in general supposed to be useful clinically. Examples: cocaine is used for anaesthesia.  Morphine and its class is used for relieve of pain.

    Alcohol, (methylated spirit) can also be used as a cleansing and disinfectant at home and in hospital. In most mouth washes, there are some alcoholic content. Heroin in prescribed form is used as a pain killer after operation and in people with serious disease conditions with pains. There is probably no tangible use for LSD. Amphetamine and related product can be used for slimming in controlled clinical conditions. So, these substances have their clinical uses. Cannabis in under scientific formulation is now in some conditions prescribed to control some diseases. The problem is that the usefulness of these substances is being manipulated by barons, couriers and users under the shadow of illegality.

    What is abuse the (ab= abnormal; use hence ab/use)

    Abuse simply means, abnormal use, improper use: A use that is a deviation from its intended purpose. You will remember that, all things (please put emphasis: ALL THINGS)  and not the least, drugs, have their intended use and purpose. Any departure from such intention is therefore an abuse or misuse.

     

    Why is drug abuse so important?

    Every action has its consequences you will remember. Like child abuse or abuse of anything for that matter, drug abuse has its own results. Very often these results are fatal or it may have long term damaging effects on the individual and everyone around the person. Someone may claim that, they are using drugs though it does not cause anyone else any harm. The fact is that they cause many people

    some harm, ultimately. In the mind of the drug user who says she or he causes no one else any harm, such user (misuser) should understand, that her or his behaviour is causing unhappiness or even depression to the spouse, parents, children and the community around the drug user.  Further, the misuser may constitute a nuisance to the society.

    Every one of us in a given society is supposed to be productive and somewhat support each other in that community. If someone steals, the society will punish the person for stealing because stealing is classed as bad. If someone harms another, the law will take its full course if caught because; the person that is harmed may become less productive and may become a burden on the community. Punishing the offender is also a deterrent that causing harm is damaging to the common good. In the same way, someone who takes drugs is cheating on the others or the rest of the community. While he may not directly cause physical harm, he or she may become injured or dies. The injury will cause the person to be less productive against the overall common good of the rest. He or she may become mentally unwell. Someone will have to pay for the gaps in productivity that is opened up by the person. Even if the drug miser is multi-billionaire, his drug habit will have impact on his children, wife, employees with their dependants and fans or the larger society that look up to the drug user.  This is why drug misuse if so dangerous.

    He, the drug user, will cause others to be unhappy and possibly depressed even if the drug user does not cause these things or agree to be causing the harms directly.  Continue next week…

  • Temptation

    Temptation

    •President Jonathan must resist acting illegally in states under emergency

    AS the politicking intensifies ahead of the 2015 general elections, the administration of President Jonathan must be very careful to ensure that it does not engage in actions that could further aggravate tensions in an already-volatile polity.

    Such caution is especially important, given the allegations of the opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) that the Federal Government is contemplating the removal of the governors of Adamawa, Yobe and Borno states under the guise of its fight against the Boko Haram insurgency in north-eastern Nigeria. Apparently, the plan is to declare a total state of emergency in those states, making the removal of the governors a necessary corollary of that action.

    If indeed the Jonathan administration is considering such a move, it would be a disastrous mistake. In 2004, former President Olusegun Obasanjo declared a state of emergency in Plateau State and removed the-then governor, Chief Joshua Dariye, replacing him with General Chris Alli (rtd.). In 2006, Governor Ayo Fayose of Ekiti State was also removed and replaced by retired General Tunji Olurin. The unconstitutionality of both moves was widely condemned, regardless of the alleged culpability and incompetence of the politicians involved. The imposition of unelected outsiders also failed to resolve the crises for which they had been brought in.

    Given the patent illegality of such unconstitutional removals, it is a surprise that the Federal Government would even contemplate it. This is, after all, an administration which had ostentatiously promised to adhere strictly to the rule of law at all times. Indeed, it did start off on an admirable note: the prompt acceptance of electoral tribunal verdicts which did not favour it were widely applauded across the political spectrum.

    It was, however, a false dawn. As President Jonathan became more deeply entrenched in office, it appears that he has been readier to embark on riskier ventures. This was signalled by his infamous “I don’t give a damn” response to enquiries on publicising his declaration of assets in June 2012. It was followed up by an increasingly inexplicable refusal to come to grips with egregious cases of corruption and unethical conduct within his administration: the pension scam, the oil subsidy fraud, the armoured-cars fiasco, the Malabu Oil scandal, and most recently, the U.S. $20.9 billion case.

    Rather than come to grips with these issues, the president has chosen an unworkable strategy of dissimulation instead. Promises are made, and committees and panels are set up, not to get to the bottom of the matter, but to cynically buy time until the public memory is distracted by yet another scandal or crisis. When concerned citizens and groups point out the unhelpfulness of such measures, they are lambasted in the most intemperate terms.

    It is against this background of an increasing readiness to fight dirty that the state of emergency gambit must be seen. For a government that has become notorious for dodging hard questions and for privileging symbolism over substance, getting rid of those it cannot legitimately confront is an obvious course of action.

    Such action would be tragically wrong. It would divert attention away from a failing anti-terror campaign by needlessly inflaming political passions. The tension that would be consequently generated can only aid the Boko Haram insurgents. It would hamper cooperation with other governors, who would be naturally resentful of the cavalier treatment of their colleagues. And as the Obasanjo experiment has shown, the chances of resolving the fundamental issues would remain as slim as ever.

    The Jonathan administration must remember that political opposition is the lifeblood of democracy. Disagreement is not manifested for its own sake, but as part of the completion of ideas which puts incumbent governments on their toes. Rather than attack those who point out the problem, it makes far more sense to address the problem itself.