The rural marshlands of Bangladesh have become the latest part of the world to be hit by the unhappy global plague of methamphetamine use. More and more of the country's struggling peasants are taking to "yaba," little pink sugar-coated pills made from caffeine and meth that are flooding in from neighboring Burma. Annual seizures of yaba in Bangladesh increased by a jaw-dropping 80,000% over the past decade, authorities say. A disturbing on-the-scene report from Public Radio International emphasizes that in conservative and Muslim rural Bangladesh, yaba is not used as a "party drug." The speed pills are most often used to get folks through long days of hard labor.
Recent comments
9 weeks 1 day ago
14 weeks 6 days ago
25 weeks 6 days ago
26 weeks 5 days ago
28 weeks 2 days ago
28 weeks 6 days ago
29 weeks 1 day ago
33 weeks 4 days ago
34 weeks 4 days ago
34 weeks 5 days ago