Thursday, October 26, 2023

Drug abuse, Youth’s sanity and the Future of Nigerian Youths

 Editor/s Note

Drug abuse, Youth’s sanity and the Future of Nigerian Youths

“They get drunk and high on a regular basis, but this is a vestige of youths that you either quit while you are young, or you become an addict if you don’t die. If you are the Old Guy in the Punk House, move out. You have a substance about problem”-Bucky Sinister

The issue of drug/substance abuse among Nigerian Youths are becoming alarming. It is not uncommon to find teens from the age of twelve years or even younger taking Indian hemp, marijuana, cannabis and some other illicit drugs which are hazardous to their health and would truncate the future.

My reason for worry or concern is that drug abuse is no longer taken in the hidings anymore, but even in the open.

Despite the traumatic effects that this is having on young people, it appears that the government is not really doing anything about this while many of our youths are becoming insane, dying untimely, causing/unleashing havoc in the society and public places, and constituting nuisance to their parents and a menace to the society.



I expect that there should be serious policy on this, and the senate should come up with bills that would nip this harmful behaviour among youths in the bud. It is very alarming that about 40%millon Nigerians are in drugs according to a report by the NDLEA in August 2021 as published by Premium Times.

Additionally, a report said that there are over 11 million cannabis users in Nigeria. The number of these young people incarcerated or in remand homes as a result of drug abuse is quite alarming.

Globally, it was estimated that “275 million people abuse drugs worldwide.” This was according to the report released last year by the United Nations Office on Drugs (UNDOC).

Nigerian youths are victims to illicit, harmful and dangerous drugs like cannabis, tobacco, glue, heroic energy drinks, miraa, tramadol, colorado, tranquillizers, ant, amphetamine, diazepam, codeine, shisha, cocaine, methamphetamine and host of others which are gory to mention.

When young people abuse drugs (boys and girls), they do that willing-nilly without considering the side effects (some of them don’t even know that). Drug abuse is often fuelled by peer influence, imitating role models; lifestyles from what they watch in movies and what they see outside.

For every addition, there is a resultant-effect. Some of the short-term effects of drugs abuse could be: happiness and confidence, talking more, feeling energetic and alert, feeling physically strong and mentally sharp, reduced appetite, dry mouth, faster heartbeat, increased sex drive, unpredictable behaviour, violent or aggressive behaviour, delusions (over-inflated sense of worth, power, knowledge or identity), anxiety, paranoia (feeling extremely suspicious of others), psychosis (seeing or hearing things that do not exist or distorted).

The long-term effect of drugs are sadness, irregular periods (difficulty having children among females), no sex drive (in males), constipation, damaged heart, lungs, liver and brain, vein damage and skin, heart and lungs infections from injecting (i.e. HIV and Hepatitis C), needing to use more to get same effect (develop tolerance), dependency among others.

My main concern in this article is the future of the Nigeria youths. ‘Youths’ have been described as the future of any nation. But what happens if the plethora or mass armies that would have been the engine room for development, economic revival, scientific advancement, medical research, and national orientation are drug addicts and as a result are mentally unbalanced to stir the wheel of the nation? This is where my worry is as many youths are having field day because they are enjoying their hobbies of drugs. I surmise that the future of this country is really at stake. It is even disheartening to note that many of them are dropping out from school to concentrate on their new engagement drug abuse. These youths are recalcitrant to corrections as their parents can’t even tame them. They don’t care about their future, but only how to take drugs. Education isn’t their priority. I have also found out that ‘yahoo-yahoo’ and singing go along with drugs.

We are losing many of our youths to illicit drugs and substance abuse. Sometime last year, the New African Shrine around Agidingbi wrote it boldly on their walls that “Drugs abuse is the dangerous”. This is to deter young people on the effects of drugs as many of them have been vagabonds, vagrants, miscreants and never-do-well.

There is the need to declare a state of emergency of drug abuse even as this ugly trend becomes a norm and part of our national lives. The radio station, TV, newspaper, magazine, NDLEA, National Orientations, Ministry of Youths Development, UN, UNICEF, UNESCO, UNODC, NGOs working and other with youths on drug abuse and other government parastatals should take the gauntlet by designing programmes that would salvage the youths from jeopardy in the future.

As I conclude this piece, Danny Trejo, author of My Life of Crime, Redemption and Hollywood have this ten pence to lend to addicts. “Drinking and drugs might temporarily bring some relief, but there is a problem in life that drugs and alcohol make worse-whether the issue is financial, emotional or legal. If you are reading this and find yourself struggling, ask God to take the burden of your shoulders, reach out for help, and stop digging a deeper hole for yourself. There is a community of millions of men and women who have similar circumstances and will be there for you, stranger or not, because their own recovery depends on helping people like you.”

 Olugbenga Adebiyi

Editor, School Connect Magazine


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