Commentary
Compulsory drug detention centers in East and Southeast Asia

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.drugpo.2014.11.011Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • We reviewed the state of compulsory drug detention centres across Asia.

  • Despite a recent global call for closure, these centres continue to operate.

  • There is also lack of access to HIV treatment and care.

  • A change to an evidence-based approach is taking place in several countries in Asia.

Abstract

Over the last three decades in response to a rise in substance use in the region, many countries in East and Southeast Asia responded by establishing laws and policies that allowed for compulsory detention in the name of treatment for people who use drugs. These centers have recently come under international scrutiny with a call for their closure in a Joint Statement from United Nations entities in March 2012. The UN's response was a result of concern for human rights violations, including the lack of consent for treatment and due process protections for compulsory detention, the lack of general healthcare and evidence based drug dependency treatment and in some centers, of forced labor and physical and sexual abuse (United Nations, 2012). A few countries have responded to this call with evidence of an evolving response for community-based voluntary treatment; however progress is likely going to be hampered by existing laws and policies, the lack of skilled human resource and infrastructure to rapidly establish evidence based community treatment centers in place of these detention centers, pervasive stigmatization of people who use drugs and the ongoing tensions between the abstinence-based model of treatment as compared to harm reduction approaches in many of these affected countries.

Keywords

People who use drugs
HIV
Harm reduction
Drug policy
Human rights

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