- A brand new EU-backed report warns Liberia faces a drug use “apocalypse” that wants a holistic strategy to fight
- Researchers say the rising variety of customers – now one in 5 Liberian younger folks – is pushed by unemployment, damaged households, and sellers focusing on college youngsters.
- The Liberia Drug Enforcement Company admits it’s crippled by lack of sources, whereas civil society accuses authorities of “hypocrisy” and consultants name for therapy, training, and group motion quite than punishment.
By Nemenlah Cyrus Harmon with New Narratives
Monrovia – Liberia is going through a full-blown drug disaster in accordance with a brand new report that finds the explanations for the disaster are rooted in poverty, failures of put up battle justice, unemployment and a rising regional drug commerce. The report, the primary to take a look at the explanations for the rising drawback, recommends a holistic strategy from authorities and companions together with the creation of a regional physique that may fight the rising commerce.
The European Union funded analysis, undertaken by the ENACT project on the Institute for Safety Research, based mostly in Nigeria, in partnership with the Liberian group, Residents Bureau for Growth and Productiveness, launched the analysis at a coverage dialogue in Monrovia, with members of presidency, civil society and the worldwide group. It got here amid a number of weeks of protests and vigilantism in opposition to a drug den in Monrovia with residents and determined households of drug addicted youth calling on the federal government to behave. Civil society actors have raised concern that vigilantism may result in violations of human rights and gas mistrust within the rule of legislation.
“We realized that it’s not nearly gangsterism. It’s a deeper drawback with intersections within the financial system, substance abuse, and social breakdown,” stated Ndubuisi Christian Ani, senior analysis with the mission. “These ghettos are horrible. Liberia is on the middle of a disaster that requires consciousness, prevention, and pressing motion.”
The “ghettos” as drug dens are known as in Liberia, function recruitment facilities and hideouts for gang members in deserted buildings, below bridges, seashores, and public areas the place younger folks generally known as “zogos” eat “kush”, a extremely addictive artificial mixture of harmful chemical like fentanyl and methamphetamine.
In interviews with 51 drug customers researchers discovered a number of points because the causes for the drug drawback in Liberia together with socio-economic stressors, idleness and lack of employment, lack of household and social constructions, pressured self-reliance, migration to Monrovia searching for higher lives, peer stress and drug sellers focusing on college youngsters. Consultants say local weather change is an important issue, as farms fail, farmers and their youngsters are pressured emigrate to cities, unlawful mining websites and different international locations searching for employment. Ani stated the risks are mounting.
“This isn’t only a prison concern; it’s a disaster of survival. We want prevention, consciousness, and group motion, not silence within the face of what’s quick changing into a Zogo apocalypse,” Ani warned.


The are 1500 ghettos referred to as drug dens in Montserrado County and 866 ghettos in Monrovia alone in accordance with the worldwide Motion for Sustainable Growth. Consultants additionally traced the issue again to Liberia’s civil wars. Medicine had been used to gas little one troopers, creating patterns of dependancy and gang loyalty that persist at present. With porous borders and restricted financial alternatives, Liberia stays a transit hub and breeding floor for narcotics.
The report advocate a holistic strategy to the disaster saying youth-focused improvement is a essential precedence for addressing the reason for gang and drug abuse in Liberia with quick-impact youth empowerment initiatives, college drug prevention applications, worldwide assist to assist Liberia set up therapy and rehabilitation facilities. He additionally stated the Financial Group of West Africa States, the regional political bloc, and the African Union ought to set up a joint activity drive with Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea to disrupt kush manufacturing factors and provide chains.
The LDEA: Preventing with Empty Arms
The launch comes after the federal government has budgeted greater than $3 million {dollars} to drug rehabilitation applications however reporting by Entrance Web page Africa/New Narratives has proven little or no of that cash is making it to customers. Within the vacuum quite a lot of newbie rehabilitation facilities have been arrange charging massive charges from determined households however doing little to unravel the issue.
Representing the Liberia Drug Enforcement Company on the analysis launch, Gwee Okay. Porkpah, deputy director for administration, made clear that the Company was working with restricted sources.
“The company has over 190 sub-offices nationwide however solely 5 autos two of that are used for operations,” he informed the gathering. Officers, lots of them unpaid volunteers, wrestle with low pay, lack of uniforms, and poor logistics. He stated the federal government would by no means have the funds to fight the rising drawback and known as on Liberians to affix within the effort.
“The LDEA can not do it alone. The federal government alone can not do it. That is everyone’s drawback,” Porkpah stated. He urged the Legislature to institute reforms on drug legal guidelines to align with worldwide greatest practices.

Civil Society Accuses Authorities of Hypocrisy within the Struggle Towards Medicine
Civil society chief Lawrence Yealue, nation director with Accountability Lab, was scathing in his response to the report.
“The federal government has not deliberately stated, ‘we are going to defend our personal.’ Over years, they arrive and converse grammar, we are going to do that however with no budgetary assist. That’s hypocrisy,” Yealue declared.
He criticized the federal government’s fixation on enforcement quite than prevention, saying drug use ought to be handled as an academic and group concern first. Arresting addicts, he argued, solely worsens the scenario.
“I’ve seen journalists wrongfully arrested simply because they had been close by,” he stated pointing to the widespread accusation of corruption amongst Drug Company officers and an absence of respect from the inhabitants. “If the drug enforcement company desires credibility, it ought to begin by testing its personal officers.”
Yealue additionally pointed a finger on the Ministry of Training, accusing it of failing to construct resilience in college students. Outdated curricula and management indifferent from Liberia’s realities, he stated, have left the youth susceptible to recruitment by sellers and gangs.
Victims, Not Criminals
Safety skilled Samuel Ford, head for group service part on the Liberia Nationwide Police and lecturer of drug dependancy and prevention on the African Methodist Episcopal College, urged Liberians to rethink how they view drug customers.
“A few of these younger individuals are keen to be rehabilitated, however the funding isn’t obtainable. Personal facilities exist, however they’re too costly,” Ford stated.
As an alternative of treating addicts as criminals, Ford argued, they need to be seen as victims and even companions in intelligence gathering. “What if it was your little one or your sister? Would you deal with them this manner?” he requested.
He known as for a holistic system the place legislation enforcement works with psychological well being professionals and social employees. However in Liberia, he lamented, the strategy has been largely about raids and punishment. “If we’re not cautious, within the subsequent ten years Liberia could produce a so-called president from the ghettos,” stated Ford.
Yealue echoed the urgency: “Solely a community-driven revolution in opposition to medication can cease the unfold.”
This story was a collaboration with New Narratives. Funding was offered by the Swedish embassy in Liberia. The funder had no say within the story’s content material.