Tag: National Anti-drug Agency

  • February 13, 2025 UDPATE 1

    February 13, 2025 UDPATE 1

    GOVERNMENT – The Cabinet led by Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu on Thursday approved two decisions regarding the prioritization of projects included in the ‘Anghel Saligny’ National Investment Program and in the program carried out by the National Investment Company (CNI). At the same time, the extension of the free zone in the Port of Constanta (southeast), on the Black Sea, was on the agenda of the Government meeting. The government thus seeks to stimulate the economic development of the region and improve trade flows in this area. Also on Thursday, new measures were adopted that support the reorganization of the National Anti-Drug Agency. On the other hand, Marcel Ciolacu announced that the ruling coalition has decided to provide financial support worth €160 euros to pensioners with low incomes. This aid will benefit approximately 2.5 million pensioners with incomes of up to €515, tantamount to the national minimum wage. The aid will be granted in two installments, in April and in the second half of the year. In the context of the latest price hikes, this measure will help maintain a minimum level of social protection for the elderly. The aid is intended to compensate for the increase in living costs and to provide essential financial support for pensioners. We recall that, earlier this year, the government decided not to raise pensions in line with the inflation rate, as planned, a move that generated society-wide dissatisfaction. (VP)

  • A threat that can no longer be ignored: drug-using children

    A threat that can no longer be ignored: drug-using children

    May 31 will mark the National Drug Risk Awareness Day, according to a bill recently adopted in the Chamber of Deputies in Bucharest. According to MP Brian Cristian from Save Romania Union (USR), the pro-European parliamentary opposition, a symbolic day of awareness concerning drug use does not solve an acute problem of our society. One in 10 young people in Romania and a quarter of high school students have used drugs at least once, according to figures made public by authorities and media representatives, Brian Cristian says. This is what decades of bad public policies in the anti-drug field have to show for, this is what the Romanian state’s powerlessness in the fight against major drug traffickers shows, the MP further notes. According to him, “young people are treated like criminals, and the big traffickers get away with it”. “Concrete anti-drug measures are needed, not a symbolic day,” the USR deputy argues. “Without effective prevention programs, without resources for youth programs and counseling, without sufficient resources for sports, which represent a good alternative for spending free time, Romania will continue to lose the fight against drugs”, the USR deputy also said.

     

    Indeed, the reality on the ground is staggering: 12-year-old children have already used drugs which they bought from dealers, without being aware of the devastating traces that these substances leave in their brains. Primary care physician and toxicologist Radu Țincu told a specialized conference that as many prevention and awareness programs as possible are necessary, given that most young people are not aware of the devastating effects of such substances:

     

    “The consumption of psychoactive substances at such a young age, in the context in which the central nervous system is not fully developed, will damage the neurocognitive area, resulting in behavioral disorders, thinking disorders, attention disorders, some of which may be irreparable. Also, drug use during adolescence increases the risk of developing a mental illness in adulthood, which again raises big questions from a social perspective. What will society look like if young people have mental disorders or behavioral disorders? If we talk about overdoses and intensive care, up to 20-30,000 EUR can be spent on each case, and subsequently, treatment in a detox psychiatric center costs up to 10,000 EUR per individual”.

     

    One of the anti-drug programs carried out in 2024 in Romania was “Choose to choose – An Arts Caravan to prevent drug use”, implemented by the non-governmental Association “E ceva bine” and financed by the Interior Ministry through the National Anti-Drug Agency. Carried out in 9 cities in northeastern Romania, in the counties of Botoşani, Neamţ and Vaslui, the project sought to raise awareness and educate young people aged 12-25, as well as their parents, concerning the risks of drug use. The project aimed to build confidence and resilience in children and young people at risk, as well as their parents, through leisure activities as an alternative to drug use. The program taught children about choice and urged them to express their feelings through art, but also through other non-formal educational activities. 8,000 young people benefited from this program.

     

    What is the best way to proceed for a young person or a child who is starting to use drugs? Iulian Văcărean, president of the “E ceva bine” Association:

     

    “I think the most important thing is to let the people who are with you know, because parents, teachers and those who really care about you will always help you feel at ease in your skin and choose what’s best for you”.

     

    The team of specialists also traveled to Suceava County, where they spoke to students, parents and teachers from schools in the municipality of Fălticeni, anti-drug expert Cătălin Ţone, a permanent collaborator of Radio Romania, has told us:

     

    “Radio România Actualități, together with other partners, continues an anti-drug campaign launched about two years ago. We travel around the country, carry out preventive activities with students, parents and teachers. Everything is interactive, we give them prizes, we encourage them to talk. We believe they can no longer learn certain things. We are trying to break away from the barriers related to the classic area of ​​preventive activities, which often do not have the desired effect. We have noticed conceptual changes, they have started to talk to us. We come here bringing good news about the legislative package, especially in the area of ​​control, increasing penalties, creating a register of drug traffickers, without suspended sentences. Another piece of good news is the fact that a draft law was promulgated four months ago regarding the establishment of eight centers for the treatment of drug addiction. There is also a lot of talk about the restructuring of the National Anti-Drug Agency, which I think is a good thing, in order to adapt to our requirements, being the national decision-maker in the field. (VP)

  • I choose to choose

    I choose to choose

    Films,
    theater shows, round tables and even camps for teenagers were some of the
    actions undertaken as part a project about sound choices. The project called ‘I
    choose to choose’ was organized by the Beneva Association and funded by the
    Romanian Government through the Interior Ministry’s National Anti-drug Agency.
    It was part of a program of national interest focusing on prevention and
    medical, psychological and social assistance for drug addicts running in the
    period 2015-2018. The project is about people and their experiences. Florentina
    Ciocănea-Petrariu, with the Beneva Association, explained the name of the
    project:


    It is about choice, our choice to get involved in the community and the education
    process. The project started from the needs we identified among teenagers, who
    most the time feel invisible and pressured by society. They learn, they go to
    school, which is a good thing, but there is this pressure that they should get
    high grades and learn whatever subject matters the school imposes, quite
    frequently ignoring their real passions. This is what prompted us to try to
    open their eyes and show them that there are people who followed their dream
    and turned it into a profession.


    It was
    a motivational project meant to answer a need indentified by its very
    initiators, as Iulian Văcărean, the president of the Beneva Association told
    us:


    We noticed that, in a rapidly-changing
    education system, what matters for pupils and stays with them throughout their
    lives is their choice to live and make their dreams and passions come true.
    This is what we tried to encourage as part of this project. Because these
    passions, which they discover in their teenage years, will stay with them all
    their lives, no matter the domain of their passion: theater, music or sports.
    And, by the way, sport keeps them healthy and able to carry on with their
    dreams.

    Next Paula
    Frăsinoiu, a police commissioner, will tell us more about the important activities
    undertaken under the project addressing secondary and high school students, a
    project meant to prevent drug consumption:


    All activities were important, but what
    drew our attention, as funders of the project, was the theater play made by our
    partners with the Beneva Association as well as the other activities held
    during school camps such as informing and raising awareness in the sense of
    promoting a healthy life.


    Also as
    part of the project, a film was made, which many high schools requested to
    screen for their students. Here is Iulian Văcărean, the president of the Beneva
    Association with details:


    The film starts from the idea of a high
    school kid, Cristian Robe, meeting people who become his inspiration. And these
    people are genuine models for today’s generations of young people, namely musicians,
    actors and athletes. Besides following one’s passion, one needs models to guide
    one’s behavior, to be able to obtain success. Success is not necessarily a goal
    in itself for each and every one of us, but we all want to live in a beautiful
    world and it’s the beautiful people who inspire us to build a beautiful world.


    Next Iulian
    Văcărean will tell us about the most important effect of the project:


    When a 7th grader comes to
    you and tells you: look, I trust you and I want to tell you what’s going on in
    my life right now, WELL, this is, to me, an extraordinary effect. A high school
    student came to us and said: ‘God, you have brought the light in our school;
    you have brought examples to which we have not had access so far!’ Some kids
    cried, others giggled when we told them good or bad stories about what could
    happen to them, but, I guess, children’s happy faces were the project’s biggest
    achievement.


    Mihaela
    Bebu, a social worker with the Service on reducing drug supply, believes the
    project was necessary:


    The level of drug consumption reported
    in Romania corresponds to the average level within the EU. We are all doing
    something, the public institutions as well as civil society, because, together,
    we can do much more than what we could achieve individually. We intend to
    continue and develop this partnership.


    The
    efficiency of such a project is based on the fact that, the impact you have on
    a child today will reach the Internet and other media, increasing its effect
    exponentially.


    (Translated by L. Simion & E. Nasta)