This photo suggests a cocktail of methylated spirit and a bottle of Coca-Cola. (Twitter (@cutekimani)) Image source: Pulse.ng |
When Olamide’s
"Science Student" was released early this year, it was heavily criticized for endorsing and celebrating an already worrisome drug culture among Nigeria’s youth.
Pulse.ng
report continues:
His
defence, and that of many who spoke in his favour was that he was only
highlighting the problem and calling the attention of those at the core of it
to do better and take charge of their lives.
Now
that we are seeing photos of methylated spirit and Coke, we are inclined to
believe Olamide was right.
You
may think you’ve seen it all but apparently, there’s a new trend among those
craving the euphoria of a momentary high.
Apparently,
young men are mixing medical-grade methylated spirit with the popular soft
drink, Coca-Cola to create a cocktail that gets them high.
Why
would anyone drink methylated spirit?
This
unholy mixture is yet to have a name but from all indications, it is catching
on fast.
In
recent months, the drug culture among Nigerian youth has drawn increased
attention.
Young
people across the country are turning to an assortment of drugs, herbal and
pharmaceutical, in a bid to fight what has been described as a deathly wave of
depression.
That
and a wave of disillusionment at the lack of opportunities have been blamed for
a culture of abuse that stretches from Lagos to slums in Kano where codeine can cost the same as a plate of food.
But
this new drift towards mixing and creating new substances is even more
troubling and defies simple explanation.
The
term “Science Student” from Olamide’s song of the same title refers to young
persons who mix intoxicating substances of various kinds to achieve an intense
high that they can vary to suit their desires.
Coca-Cola
is a beverage that nearly everyone is familiar with but we can’t say the same
for the other guy.
Methylated
Spirit is basically alcohol made for general medical and pharmaceutical use
that has been made unfit for drinking by the addition of about 10 percent
methanol and typically also some pyridine and a violet dye.
A drug epidemic
These
additives make it taste bad and more importantly, poisonous.
Mixing
this spirit with coke might douse the bad taste but it doesn’t change the fact
that in a bid to get high, young people are slowly doing irreparable damage to
their own bodies.
Drug
abuse has now become a hydra-headed monster. As appealing as the idea of
placing stringent rules on the sale of drugs may seem, it is too obvious that
it does nothing to solve the problem.
A
good place to start would be tackling the causes of the issue and giving young
people a chance in a country that tells them one too many times that they do
not matter.
Most
of these cocktails are made by young men who do not know better.
It
would go a long way if agencies and schools could teach the perils of drug
abuse beyond a page or two in social studies and the weekly sermon that
promises hell for all sinners.
As
it stands, we’re headed for an epidemic of epic proportions. Right now, our
conversations are mostly about the economy and government and the depth of our
untapped potential.
But if we ignore this problem, we may lose a large chunk of the youth we seem so proud of yet so eager to ignore.
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