Zürcher Nachrichten - Myanmar addicts battle their demons in the 'House of Love'

EUR -
AED 3.806165
AFN 73.60039
ALL 97.613792
AMD 414.443968
ANG 1.86845
AOA 946.652273
ARS 1072.766771
AUD 1.660708
AWG 1.865267
AZN 1.761896
BAM 1.947099
BBD 2.093246
BDT 126.214764
BGN 1.951168
BHD 0.390549
BIF 3066.397139
BMD 1.036259
BND 1.41128
BOB 7.163917
BRL 6.299316
BSD 1.036667
BTN 88.85607
BWP 14.368652
BYN 3.392706
BYR 20310.681315
BZD 2.082474
CAD 1.48855
CDF 2974.064241
CHF 0.942203
CLF 0.037891
CLP 1045.771736
CNY 7.593394
CNH 7.6105
COP 4503.976482
CRC 526.74106
CUC 1.036259
CUP 27.46087
CVE 109.774449
CZK 25.140662
DJF 184.613234
DKK 7.459751
DOP 63.445866
DZD 140.105348
EGP 52.494615
ERN 15.543889
ETB 132.469254
FJD 2.399354
FKP 0.820699
GBP 0.829484
GEL 2.917089
GGP 0.820699
GHS 15.270613
GIP 0.820699
GMD 74.088491
GNF 8961.951575
GTQ 8.003159
GYD 216.898648
HKD 8.05918
HNL 26.356222
HRK 7.43299
HTG 135.314014
HUF 415.415957
IDR 16756.312085
ILS 3.763745
IMP 0.820699
INR 88.879075
IQD 1358.130897
IRR 43626.514373
ISK 145.3147
JEP 0.820699
JMD 162.153816
JOD 0.735019
JPY 164.11342
KES 134.088873
KGS 90.154513
KHR 4184.261342
KMF 496.824193
KPW 932.632746
KRW 1508.109729
KWD 0.319386
KYD 0.863931
KZT 548.04565
LAK 22609.745263
LBP 92837.141209
LKR 306.351004
LRD 192.826452
LSL 19.267712
LTL 3.059805
LVL 0.626823
LYD 5.102151
MAD 10.371353
MDL 19.128336
MGA 4871.185046
MKD 61.347944
MMK 3365.729624
MNT 3521.208799
MOP 8.303215
MRU 41.209845
MUR 48.13407
MVR 16.009741
MWK 1797.649466
MXN 21.129295
MYR 4.650214
MZN 66.217572
NAD 19.267897
NGN 1596.875386
NIO 38.149154
NOK 11.756418
NPR 142.170679
NZD 1.836547
OMR 0.398926
PAB 1.036757
PEN 3.901627
PGK 4.216119
PHP 60.241843
PKR 288.829403
PLN 4.261284
PYG 8199.359384
QAR 3.78047
RON 4.97394
RSD 117.067304
RUB 110.613751
RWF 1439.851815
SAR 3.889984
SBD 8.691677
SCR 14.769097
SDG 622.792193
SEK 11.497576
SGD 1.414535
SHP 0.820699
SLE 23.574832
SLL 21729.841497
SOS 592.452497
SRD 36.346273
STD 21448.474291
SVC 9.071462
SYP 2603.632707
SZL 19.261924
THB 35.817781
TJS 11.331254
TMT 3.626907
TND 3.299854
TOP 2.42702
TRY 36.624889
TTD 7.032506
TWD 33.934899
TZS 2568.522975
UAH 43.848928
UGX 3828.889775
USD 1.036259
UYU 45.596243
UZS 13424.011891
VES 54.934768
VND 26289.897191
VUV 123.026774
WST 2.862964
XAF 653.032481
XAG 0.03452
XAU 0.000392
XCD 2.800542
XDR 0.798424
XOF 653.032481
XPF 119.331742
YER 258.287353
ZAR 19.337997
ZMK 9327.575916
ZMW 29.105654
ZWL 333.675056
  • RBGPF

    -2.6900

    59.31

    -4.54%

  • BTI

    -0.0050

    36.965

    -0.01%

  • AZN

    0.1600

    67

    +0.24%

  • RELX

    0.4080

    46.058

    +0.89%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    23.49

    0%

  • NGG

    -0.1090

    58.761

    -0.19%

  • SCS

    -0.2650

    11.175

    -2.37%

  • RIO

    -0.1100

    58.27

    -0.19%

  • BCC

    -2.6800

    117.54

    -2.28%

  • BCE

    0.0350

    23.975

    +0.15%

  • JRI

    -0.2100

    12.24

    -1.72%

  • RYCEF

    0.1100

    7.2

    +1.53%

  • GSK

    0.2150

    34.175

    +0.63%

  • BP

    0.8940

    31.914

    +2.8%

  • VOD

    -0.0410

    8.429

    -0.49%

  • CMSD

    -0.2150

    23.515

    -0.91%

Myanmar addicts battle their demons in the 'House of Love'
Myanmar addicts battle their demons in the 'House of Love' / Photo: Sai Aung MAIN - AFP

Myanmar addicts battle their demons in the 'House of Love'

More than a hundred shaven-headed men pour out of their Yangon hostel around 6 am for a day of weightlifting, karate drills, dancing and Buddhist prayer -- drug rehabilitation, Myanmar style.

Text size:

The group of doctors, musicians and street food vendors set off for a jog around a verdant, orchid-dotted compound, watched over by supervisors carrying heavy wooden sticks.

Welcome to another day at "Metta Saneain" -- "the House of Love" in Burmese -- a rehab centre dishing out tough love to break the cycle of drug addiction.

Myanmar has long been a narcotics-producing powerhouse, with drugs fuelling and financing decades of internal conflict and authorities turning a blind eye to the billion-dollar industry.

The chaos unleashed by the military's 2021 coup has gutted the legal economy and the country is now the world's biggest producer of opium and a major source of methamphetamine, according to the United Nations.

Much of the product is smuggled out to other Asian countries, Australia and Europe, while scoring on the streets of commercial hub and major port Yangon is easy.

- 'Lost' young men -

Aung, 32, who asked for his full name not to be used for professional reasons, had qualified as a doctor and was running his own clinic when he tried meth for the first time.

Three years later it had taken over his life, he told AFP after a breakfast of hot rice porridge cooked and served by another patient.

"I lost everything. It transformed me from a successful person into a lost young man."

He was hospitalised three times before his parents brought him to "Metta Saneain" and its uncompromising regime.

Joining in the karate-style drills, tug-of-war competitions and meditation sessions was not easy while he still had cravings, he said.

"At the beginning, it was a bit difficult for me to be here. They are always making us do some activity or other, but later I got used to it.

"Now I have no time to get bored. It helps me become physically stronger and healthier."

Angkoon Phattarakorn, a specialist at the Princess Mother National Institute on Drug Abuse Treatment in neighbouring Thailand, said tough approaches can help in the short term but they need to be tailored to individual needs.

"If some people have a heart problem, they might not do well if you tell them to do heavy exercises," he told AFP. "People with mental problems might not respond well to meditation."

There are questions over how effective such schemes are in the long run, he added.

"Addicts need proper training to stop using drugs, and reintegrate themselves into society, as well as develop the ability to refuse drug temptations."

After the morning jog the patients sing the national anthem, and prayer is an important part of the daily routine, with both Buddhist and Islamic services provided.

Residents have to wash and clean their own clothes throughout their stay.

An instructor leads one group through a Bollywood-style dance routine of shoulder twitching and hip swinging, prompting shy smiles from the class.

"Drugs are available everywhere now as there are some limitations in controlling them," said centre administrator San Shein, referring to the current conflict.

The facility's focus on exercise and meditation helps patients to "develop physically and mentally", he said. "Some of them have six-packs now."

The approach has given a new direction to Zaw Wanna, 26, who entered the centre to kick his heroin habit four years ago and has stayed on as a supervisor.

When he arrived he was one of around 40 patients, mostly addicted to marijuana, meth pills or heroin.

- 'Happy water' -

Now there are more than three times as many.

The most common addictions are to ecstasy, ketamine and "happy water" -- a mixture that can contain MDMA, tramadol, caffeine, diazepam and ketamine and has proliferated in nightclubs in recent years.

"I sold everything we have at home for drugs," said Zaw Wanna.

"Now there are many addicts and many parents have been saddened. I want people to quit. I myself was an addict and I regret it now."

Patients' relatives pay for their treatment at the "House of Love", which costs from around 400,000 to one million Myanmar kyat ($90-$230) depending on their condition.

The facility has rehabilitated 205 people this year, said Khin Khin Win, secretary at the Myanmar Drug Addicts Rehabilitation Association (Central), an umbrella group.

After years of turmoil, Aung is now helping as a volunteer doctor at the centre and hopes to pursue a degree in applied psychology.

His family now have some hope for him, he said.

"I don't want to use anymore. It's been a scary thing for me."

W.F.Portman--NZN