Dr Wan Azizah: Bill on hallucinogens to be formulated to address glue-sniffing

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Dr Wan Azizah showing the leaflets of anti-drug campaign after chairing the cabinet committee meeting on eradication of drugs at Perdana Putra. — Bernama photo

PUTRAJAYA: A bill on hallucinogens will be formulated to address glue-sniffing and abuse of psychotropic medicine among teenagers, said Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail.

She said addiction to glue became a serious social probem which involved children as young as 10-years-old, as it eventually affected their heath.

“Hallucinogens, including psychotropic medicine and glue, are not categorised as illegal substances, but you can make them into a concoction and get high on it.

“That actually affects your brain, especially the young people as early as 10 (years old),” she told a media conference after chairing the cabinet committee meeting on eradication of drugs at Perdana Putra here yesterday.

The meeting was also attended by Home Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin, Health Minister Datuk Seri Dr Dzulkefly Ahmad, Youth and Sports Minister Syed Saddiq Syed Abdul Rahman and Ministers in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Liew Vui Keong and P Waytha Moorthy. She said the bill was in the stage of drafting.

“Punitive and educational aspects, all will be contained (in the draft)…we’re still looking into it,” she said when asked whether the bill would include punishment for offenders.

Meanwhile, Dr Wan Azizah said the committee also agreed for the relevant laws to be amended to include offence for planting ketum without permission.

She did not specifically mention the laws, but said mitragynine contained in the ketum leaf  had been listed in the Third Schedule, Psychotropic Substances, Poisons Act 1952.

“Planting of ketum is currently allowed, but when it is harvested and sold, it becomes an offence, “ she added.

Dr Wan Azizah said the committee also agreed to remove Section 8 and 9 of the Drug Dependants (Treatment and Rehabilitation) Act 1983 from the Registration of Criminals and Undesirable Persons Act 1969.

“This is made so that drug addicts who underwent rehabilitation voluntarily will not be registered, so they  have no criminal record,” she said.

According to the deputy prime minister, the proposal is based on the need to remove the stigma attached to drug addicts who have been rehabilitated, enabling them to work and start a new life and be functional again in the society.

Apart from that, she said, the committee also proposed that incentives given to employers who took former convicts into their employment be extended to those who employed former drug addicts.

“From studies carried out, it shows that the rate of rehabilitation is better if former drug addicts have jobs to continue with their life so that they can fend for themselves and support their families,’ she added.

Dr Wan Azizah said the ‘Perangi Dadah Habis-habisan’ (PDH) programme, which was implemented since 2016, had been intensified in 178 locations which were identified as high-risk drug areas.

The committee, she said, was also seriously considering to impose a curfew for those below 18 years of age to avoid them from getting involved in drug abuse, as being done in Iceland.

Dr Wan Azizah said Malaysia could implement the curfew based on the model by Iceland, but several matters had to be considered before any decision could be made.

“When there is a curfew, parents will know where their children are,” she added. — Bernama