Vancouver: 'Drug Central' of North America

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If you think the drug problem can be confined to Mexico or bad neighborhoods in the US, read this:
BBC News
Vancouver: ‘Drug Central’ of North America

By Rajesh Mirchandani
BBC News, Vancouver

**As Vancouver prepares to host the Winter Olympics, the city continues to struggle with a vicious drugs war. Dozens have been killed in escalating turf battles that have spread far beyond the city limits. But it is a war that has its roots even further away, in Mexico. **

It rains a lot in Vancouver, but this city’s ambition will not be dampened. Olympic organisers have spent nearly $2bn (US$1.87bn; £1.2bn) to showcase a confident, modern metropolis to the world.

But barely a mile from the gleaming stadium that will host the opening ceremony, there is another Vancouver no-one is proud of.

The Downtown Eastside is a clump of rundown hotels and liquor stores. It is teeming with pushers, pimps and prostitutes, and home to one of the worst drug problems in North America.

“Heroin, crack, pot… every type of drug you want, you can get it here,” a man tells me.

“Do you have any pills?” a young woman asks, her red hair starting to drip in the rain. She is looking to buy a $1 valium tablet, because she does not have $10 (£6) for heroin.

“Pretty much everything is $10,” I am told. “This is Drug Central.”
In a dingy alleyway, I met Shirley, smoking crack behind a dumpster.
She told me she was 40 and had been doing drugs since she was 14. She used to sell her body. Now she “shuffles” - ferries around small amounts of drugs for dealers in exchange for money.

She starts to prepare something called a speedball, heroin mixed with cocaine. She tells me she wants me to see the reality of addiction, but it is difficult to watch.

**‘Middle-class gangsters’ **
There are many like Shirley in the Downtown Eastside. They are the lowest rung of a vicious food chain.

“ **[The Olympics] scrutiny actually puts more pressure on us to fix these problems sooner rather than later **”

Gregor Robertson Vancouver mayor

Dozens have been killed in Vancouver’s drug wars. Police say more than 100 gangs carve up a lucrative trade. And it is a problem that extends far beyond the city limits.

An hour to the east, in the lush Fraser Valley, lies Abbotsford, a town that once offered quiet, middle-class suburbia.

Seventeen-year-old Mathea Sturm walks me past her school gates. Five of her schoolmates died in as many months last year, and the town saw a spate of drug-related killings.

“It’s still pretty hard to deal with the fact that we’ve lost a lot of people,” she says. “It was a peaceful town, you could walk around at 11 at night… Then, all of a sudden, all this… it was sort of a big pandemic.”

Abbotsford’s comfortable homes and neat lawns have spawned a peculiarly middle-class breed of gangster.

The police know who and where they are, they just wait for evidence and the right opportunity.

As I drive along with Pc Marcus Senft, he points out a sizeable house in an upscale cul-de-sac, the home of a notorious crime family.

There are bars on the front door and he tells me the SUV in the driveway sports bullet-proof windows.

“Yeah, there’s definitely some fear in this neighbourhood,” he says.

On the outskirts of town, we drive to Zero Avenue, the US border.
“There’s no fence,” Pc Senft says, “just a big field.”

Canada and the US share one of the longest land borders in the world. Here, it consists of a ditch, a few feet separating two countries. It looks easy to jump across.

Within minutes of our arrival, a US border guard drives up.
He said he had spotted us on hidden cameras, but admitted it was impossible to stop everyone - or everything - coming over illegally.

**Heroin project **
Locally-grown marijuana - called “BC bud” - is smuggled south to the US and Mexico. Cocaine and weapons come north.

Mostly it is hidden in lorries, but it also comes across the fields around Abbotsford and other border towns. This porous frontier has become a frontline.

But the war started far away: the escalation in Canada’s violence is a result of a crackdown by Mexican authorities on drug gangs there.

“Everything is global now,” says Supt Pat Fogarty, of British Columbia’s Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit, which tackles organised crime in the region.

“When the war started, the cartels were too busy fighting the Mexican government… which caused a breakdown in the distribution lines, so people weren’t getting their drugs,” he says.

“There would be territorial takeovers, rip-offs, a variety of things that caused tension… If you look at the time in which this disruption occurred in Mexico and the disruption that occurred here, you can see the correlation between the two,” he adds.

“We need to solve them,” he told me. “And I think that kind of scrutiny actually puts more pressure on us to fix these problems sooner rather than later.”

The mayor supports a controversial project in the Downtown Eastside called InSite, the only place in North America where it is legal to inject heroin.

InSite won a legal exemption, allowing the project to operate. On the ground floor they offer free syringes and a nurse to monitor against overdoses; upstairs, a rehab centre for those who want to quit.

Those running it claim a higher quit-rate than any official programme, and a lower rate of HIV infection through shared needles.

Opponents, and there are many, say it condones drugs use.

It is a highly unusual project in a city known for being progressive. But it is not enough to clean up the Downtown Eastside.
Vancouver’s problems will last long after the Olympic spirit has left.

Story from BBC NEWS:
It will be coming to your neighborhood soon.
 
Vancouver Canada has often been referred as the New Los Angeles of Canada.
I find the article somewhat bias. You can no more contend to say that United States is Drug Central. The Drug Trade Business is a global problem that has to be fought collectively.
Which it presently is.
 
Yeah I know quite a bit of folks that like to go up to BC to toke up. It’s pretty tollerated up there. Imagine some of them people are enjoying the Olympics right now. :cool:
 
Yeah I know quite a bit of folks that like to go up to BC to toke up. It’s pretty tollerated up there. Imagine some of them people are enjoying the Olympics right now. :cool:
Not sure what your trying to insinuate here but smoking Marijuana or Hashish is illegal under federal law whether one resides in United States, Canada, or just about any other international democratic country. Where do you get the idea that smoking dope is tolerated in Vancouver, B.C. or any other place in Canada? I wouldn’t be so gullible and buy into every tidbit of sensationalized story that newspapers or electronic media tells you.
 
Not sure what your trying to insinuate here but smoking Marijuana or Hashish is illegal under federal law whether one resides in United States, Canada, or just about any other international democratic country. Where do you get the idea that smoking dope is tolerated in Vancouver, B.C. or any other place in Canada? I wouldn’t be so gullible and buy into every tidbit of sensationalized story that newspapers or electronic media tells you.
That’s why I said tollerated and not legal. Although it is illegal smoke in Vancouver, BC laws aren’t really enforced that much there. Are you unaware of “coffee shops” they have there? They don’t sell it there, but many provide a spot to smoke. Vancouver is famous for that reason. I haven’t been there myself, but I know folks who have gone there and visited them. Some people have nick named it “Vansterdam”. And like you said it is illegal, so there are do and don’ts which is why people can get arrested.
 
That’s why I said tollerated and not legal. Although it is illegal smoke in Vancouver, BC laws aren’t really enforced that much there. Are you unaware of “coffee shops” they have there? They don’t sell it there, but many provide a spot to smoke. Vancouver is famous for that reason. I haven’t been there myself, but I know folks who have gone there and visited them. Some people have nick named it “Vansterdam”. And like you said it is illegal, so there are do and don’ts which is why people can get arrested.
The biggest franchise coffee shop in Canada is Tim Horton’s which pales only somewhat in comparison to Dunkin Donuts in the U.S. which also happens to be the worlds largest coffee/donut retailer. I realize there are hundreds of other coffee shops around Vancouver.
I believe the British BBC printed their article as scene in the OP’s original post due to this “Vansterdam” name you mention in reference to this site: cannabisculture.com/articles/3511.html But really; I think we can both conclude that you’ll find this bigger than average drug affiliation in any large city and more so if it happens to be a busy port city. Given the fact that Vancouver, British Columbia and Seattle, Washington are virtually an earshot away from each, what else can one expect.

Peace
Chris
 
Vancouver, BC is in fact known for marijuana, gangs (especially East Indian) and a tolerant attitude towards certain drugs, especially Marijuana, which is common across Canada in general. In high school “BC bud” was much coveted, and I live in Ontario, which is across the Continent. Still the consequences of the aforementioned are naturally starting to invoke a more hard-line approach among residents towards drugs and crime. The authorities do take it very seriously, and are taking it more seriously. Ironically, the province of BC is bordered immediately by Alberta to its East, and Alberta is the exact opposite of BC in that it is heavily conservative. The present Conservative federal government, which is based out of Alberta, is said to be quite strict and firm in its policies towards drug and drug related crime; that is, simply not-tolerated.
 
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