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We Have Outsourced a Drug Habit–Cocaine Abuse in India

We saw this article on the AP feed–

Cocaine May Be New Status Symbol in India

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Filed at 10:20 a.m. ET

NEW DELHI (AP) — What may have begun with a couple of snorts has fast become a media-driven blizzard over whether, along with German cars and French handbags, another Western import is sweeping India — cocaine.

Call it the full-on yuppification of India’s latte-swilling set.

”It’s all linked with purchasing power,” said Kiran Bedi, a police official who runs a drug treatment center. ”Cocaine is expensive. You’ve got to have money for it, and now more people have money. It becomes a matter of keeping up with the Joneses.”

It’s natural to see many Indian trends through the prism of the country’s economic boom, and this story is no different. Exposed in increasing numbers to clothes, music and mores of the West, some well-off Indians have, perhaps inevitably, picked up its less savory habits.

That’s clear on any given weekend at New Delhi’s trendy clubs and bars — places with velvet ropes and steep cover charges — where drugs are readily on offer, and, occasionally, openly in use.

A twenty-something banker at an elite New Delhi country club says that when he lived in New York it was common to snort a line or two of cocaine. ”Now I’m back here … and so are a lot of other people,” he said. ”But we’re still living like we did in New York.”

He asked not to be named for fear of India’s stiff anti-drug laws and ”my mother-in-law.”

Only a tiny percentage of Indians are believed to have tried the drug. It costs upward of $100 a gram and more than 40 percent of the country’s billion people live on less than a dollar a day. A bigger problem is heroin, on sale dirt-cheap in much of India, and thought responsible for an AIDS crisis in the country’s northeast among those who inject the drug.

Still, there’s ample anecdotal evidence that cocaine is growing more popular among the affluent.

There has been a string of busts over the past months, including one at Olive, an upscale New Delhi eatery, and the arrest of a Nigerian alleged dealer in the capital last month.

But those arrests were small-time — mere grams — compared with the seizure three weeks ago of 440 pounds of cocaine, India’s largest bust, aboard a ship at a container depot outside Bombay.

Then there’s the hospitalization of the scion of a prominent political family for overdosing on what appears to have been a mixture of cocaine and heroin.

In the hands of the Indian media, the plight of Rahul Mahajan has become a cautionary tale for a potentially wayward generation — and an excuse to introduce readers to the mechanics and effects of cocaine consumption.

”The usual method for cocaine intake is sniffing, smoking or injecting,” one daily, The Hindu, revealed to its readers. The Times of India reported that cocaine ”makes one euphoric and enhances sexual prowess.”

The Hindustan Times went even further, linking the drug to bisexuality. ”India’s power-packed beautiful people are ‘doing it”’ — bisexuality, that is — ”just to add value to the cocaine snorts and tequila shots” at parties, the paper said.

With police rounding up alleged pushers, some of the more visible partygoers in town are scrambling to make sure their dealers aren’t yet on the authorities’ radar, the banker said.

Police say foreigners make up the core of the trafficking and distribution network in India, but acknowledge that Indians are involved too. The cocaine, all from South America, arrives by courier on airplanes or ships such as the one caught near Bombay, which police say came from Ecuador.

India’s economy has grown 8.1 percent on average over each of the past three years. The boom has given tens of millions of people disposable incomes for the first time and is estimated to have more than doubled to 50,000 the number of households with incomes above $225,000.

The new money has helped foster a Western-style urban consumer culture that in turn has loosened many conservative traditions. One hit Bollywood movie last year was about an unmarried couple living together, a phenomenon almost unheard of here.

Cocaine too was also relatively unheard of until recently.

A woman who does public relations for fashion designers, and who asked not to be named for fear of upsetting clients, said there used to be one dealer in New Delhi. ”Now there are dozens.”

It is no secret that India supplies some of the better minds to American industry, especially with regard to science and technology. The Indian contribution to our collective brain power is quite considerable and its fair to say that both nations have benefited from the exchange of personnel. While it is arguable that outsourcing has been as good for the American workforce as it has for our multi-nationals, there is no doubt that this trend is by no means on the downturn.

The article states clearly that only a small minority of Indians are using cocaine or heroin, or cocaine and heroin together, which in the eighties was affectionately referred to as “chasing the dragon.” Of course, those who chased the dragon often ended up in fiancial or professional ruin, divorced and dead. Cocaine itself is not exactly the healthiest drug, which can impact health insurance rates. Cocaine often elicits tendenacies toward violence, sexual eccentricity and erratic behavior.

On it’s own, it can be argued this is the individual’s business. But in the workplace, the business and the ensuing liability factors are yours, the employer. The considerations are endless, from downturns in productivity to the increase in violence. There should be concerns for the theft of client lists and, moreso, the illegal sale of your intellectual propriety. People strung out on drugs are vulernable to predators who can profit from the theft and sale of such material to your competition.

The success India presently enjoys had not gone unnoticed by drug smugglers. It is only natural that they will prey on the successful, creating the kind of cachet where cocaine use is hip and cool as the article attests. This notion has apparently resonated with certain wealthier and, presumably more successful and more educated Indians. It certainly worked here in the eighties and cocaine use in the U.S. is on the rise again. Ultimately, with prolonged cocaine and heroin use, a considerable work ethic can erode to grievous levels. Substance abusers can endanger your business. They can create liability issues and malfeasance in the workplace. It might be one of your most reliable employees who though well intended contributes more to the destruction rather than the enhancement of your business.

As with all business models today, the same old isn’t the same old for long. Successful employers must adjust and instruct their Human Resource Managers to modify their pre-employment screening measures. Even though it is a tad more expensive, conducting background checks on foreign employees should be standard practice. Today with modern information retrieval systems, you can conduct international criminal background checks, education verification, and employment verifications. You may want to consider drug tests as well.

It’s your business, and the upfront costs of background testing are small compared to liability and damage factors. So always remember to check them out before your hired.

By Gordon Basichis

Gordon Basichis is the Co-Founder of Corra Group, specializing in pre-employment background checks and corporate research. He has been a marketing and media executive and has worked in the entertainment industry, the financial, health care and technology sectors. He is the author of the best selling Beautiful Bad Girl, The Vicki Morgan Story, a non-fiction novel that helped define exotic sexuality in the late twentieth century. He is the author of the Constant Travellers and has recently completed a new book, The Guys Who Spied for China, dealing with Chinese Espionage in the United States. He has been a journalist for several newspapers and is a screenwriter and producer.