Thanks to a pair of horrific events in Juárez, Mexico’s addict population has drawn unusual international attention in recent weeks: 17 addicts were murdered on September 17 in a rehab center in the increasingly dystopian border city, and 10 more were killed days later in another facility across town.
The problems for Mexican addicts are not just limited to Juárez; drug users in many cities are increasingly vulnerable to violence fueled by the drug trade, which is more worrying when you consider the upward tendency of drug use in Mexico. Mexico has long been thought of as merely the narcotics pipeline feeding the US habit, but this description is decreasingly apt. According to the most recent National Survey on Addiction, the percentage of cocaine-using Mexicans doubled from 2002 to 2008, and the proportion of pot smokers also ticked up. The recent increases were fueled in large part by growth among drug-using youths (almost half in Mexico are between 12 and 25), which has policy-makers and experts worried that the recent gains are part of a long-term trend that will greatly deepen Mexico’s security challenges.
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