'Kush' scare hits West Africa

Posted on February 15th, 2022 by Bill Weinberg and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , .

AfricaThere has been a flurry of vague but lurid reportage about a supposedly addicting and debilitating pseudo-cannabis that is going around in Sierra Leone and other West African countries. This may be akin to products such as K2 and Spice, widely marketed in the US and Europe—but if reports are to be believed, it is far more dangerous.

There is a certain whiff of sensationalism to the sudden news accounts of a chemically-treated herbal substance being used as a street drug, and apparently destroying lives, in Sierra Leone. But, frustratingly, the reports have offered no information about what actual chemicals are used.

Reports have also not explained why it has taken hold in West Africa, where cannabis is widely available. The crowning insult to the world cannabis community is that the stuff is being called "Kush"—appropriating a term associated with high-grade indica.

The Beeb goes yellow?
Surprisingly, the most prominent such report is from the usually serious and rigorous BBC. The BBC News on Feb. 7 ran a video entitled "Kush: Sierra Leone's new illegal drug."

Grainy and pixelated images show supposed addicts literally groveling in filth in an open sewer, frenzied youth gesticulating wildly and self-mutilating, teary-eyed women confessing that they have been reduced to selling sex on the street. Also shown are police in camouflage uniforms carrying out raids on the homes of dealers—and uncovering large plastic bags of unidentified herbaceous substance. We are told: "Medical staff in the capital Freetown say that 90% of the male admissions to the central psychiatric ward are due to Kush use."

Featured is Sierra Leonean filmmaker Tyson Conteh, who last April did an in-depth video report for the BBC on the oppressive conditions faced by sex workers in his country.  

"Something bad is happening in my country," Conteh relates in the new video. "Recently I've noticed on social media a lot of very, very young people dying untimely deaths, running mad, harming themselves. I hear these horrors are being caused by a cheap new illegal high called 'Kush'... Kush has become king, overtaking more expensive street drugs like Tramadol."

Conteh briefly interviews a young woman who says she sells herself to support her habit—which seems to conflict with the notion that "Kush" is one of the cheaper street drugs available in Freetown. The woman, identified only as Isha, goes from dejection to euphoria after a few puffs off what looks like a joint. Isha speaks wistfully of a friend who died, by strong implication from her Kush habit—but she also says that the friend was abusing alcohol, and "stopped eating."

The camera moves on to what Conteh calls "desperate young Kush addicts searching through raw sewage, hoping to find something they can sell to survive." This immediately raises the question of whether Kush is to blame for this desperation, or endemic poverty. Conteh does concede some ambiguity about the root cause of the misery: "Smoking Kush is an escape from this life. It's a vicious circle."

But there is no ambiguity in the assertion tat Kush causes violent behavior. One user "admits" that "you go into a mad world" and "commit crimes."

Also interviewed are members of the Sierra Leonean police force's Transnational Organized Crime Unit or TOCU. An officer, Andrew Ronko, shows confiscated Kush—plastic bags of an herbaceous substance he identifies as "marshmallow leaf."

He also shows what are identified only as "chemicals," which "are mixed together to create Kush." There appears to be no set formula. Kush comes "in several forms," Ronko says. "The dynamics are changing when it comes to Kush, you know? So it really is a threat."

Finally, we are given the story of another desperate user, identified as Tindem. After being exhorted by a public relations officer of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency at a police-organized community meeting, he sees the error of ways. He vows to quit Kush for the sake of his two young children, as the background music shifts from ominous to uplifting.

At no point is it mentioned that the name "kush" is already taken, so to speak—by a potent but innocuous and even (when used with respect) salubrious THC-laden flower.

Context: from civil war to gang war
Tyson Conteh did not respond to efforts to contact him through social media. However, Project CBD spoke with Kars de Bruijne, head of the West Africa program at the at the Netherlands Institute of International Relations (Clingendael), who has served in an advisory capacity to police forces in the region. He acknowledges that concern about Kush is fast growing among regional law enforcement. "Kush is also in Guinea, but it is really big in Sierra Leone," he says.

In fact there are suspicions of cross-border trade, as Guinea is emerging a regional hub in the narco trade—especially, in recent years, for methamphetamine. De Bruijne notes that when Guinea's border with Mali was closed for several months due to both COVID-19 and political tensions in 2020-21, "there was an explosion of meth in Sierra Leone." He believes that exports usually sent across the Sahara through Mali were diverted down the coast to Sierra Leone. Claims that drug-traffickers were behind this month's attempted coup in neighboring Guinea-Bissau also speak to the exploding  narco-economy in the region.    

De Bruijne, however, takes issue with the notion that Kush makes users violent. "That's not the case," he says. "It makes you lazy." So much so that he believes it is leading to a break-down in discipline among Freetown's street gangs.

De Bruijne also provides greater clarity about the price of Kush. He agrees that that a minute quantity (enough for a skinny joint, about a gram) goes for 5,000 leones, which is about 50 cents. That's about the same as a price for "a hit" of other sadly popular street drugs, such as "brown-brown"—which is cocaine or meth cut with gunpowder. This is applied subcutaneously, so users have to actually cause a small wound in the skin with a knife or cigarette.

"Brown-brown" was particularly used during Sierra Leone's brutal 1991-2002 civil war, when it was a tool in the manipulation of child soldiers. Variants are still being sold on the streets, sometimes called "chicklets" or "Thai white." The still-popular Tramadol, an addictive pain-killer, goes for about 18,000 leones a tablet. De Bruijne believes that Kush emerged partially in response to a crackdown on Tramadol.

The culture around such unsavory substances took hold during the war, de Bruijne says, but is still embedded in that of the Freetown street gangs, which are cultivated as proxies by the rival political parties (as was notoriously the case in Jamaica in the 1970s). But de Bruijne says that "mobilization of gangs for political ends has become more difficult" thanks to the debilitating effects of Kush.

The very sad irony here is that there is no shortage of actual cannabis in Sierra Leone. "The coastal states of West Africa are a growing source of cannabis," de Bruijne says. "It's grown in really large quantities in the mountains around Freetown, mostly for domestic consumption." Known locally as ganja, jamba or maggi, it is competitively priced compared the dangerous synthetics—just 500 leones for a small joint's worth.

Does anyone know what it actually is? 
Trying to figure out what "Kush" actually is entails two questions. First, what herbaceous material is used as the base. And secondly, what are the chemical constituents of the mix it is treated with. 

The BBC report mentions marshmallow leaf, while an August 2021 report on a Freetown bust from the local Politico SL makes reference to "mashed mallow plant." These both presumably refer to Althaea officinalis, commonly known as marshmallow—although it is the root rather than the leaf that is traditionally used for medicinal purposes, and it is indigenous to Europe rather than Africa. It is not intoxicating, and not associated with any health hazards.

However, a report that same month on a seemingly different bust from local news site Awoko identifies the seized plant base as "Indian hemp," describing it as "dried leaves with a sticky feel and pungent odour." This rather unambiguously refers to cannabis. It should also be noted that authorities said this shipment, seized at Freetown's airport, came from the United Kingdom.

The Politico SL report said that the 41 "sachets" of leaf were found at a wharfside warehouse with "3 litres of acetone liquid." The Awoko report said the seized "Indian hemp" had been treated with "potassium hydroxide." This was also identified as "synthetic cannabinol"—which it assuredly is not.

Acetone is a widely used solvent and paint remover, which can cause "confusion," "dizziness" and "fast heart rate" when inhaled in large quantities. Potassium hydroxide is listed by US health and environmental authorities as a hazardous substance that "can cause headache, dizziness, nausea and vomiting."

De Bruijne says that tea leaves are often used as the base, and that authorities frequently describe the chemical treatment as simply "fertilizer." He agrees that the stuff, whatever it is, appears to be addictive. However, the varying vegetable base and chemical formula alike inevitably raise the question of whether "Kush" is a discrete substance at all—or just a catch-phrase for any herbaceous material treated with any chemical mix.

Synthetics and semantics
The word Kush of course originally referred to the Hindu Kush mountain range of Afghanistan, the source of many of the Cannabis indica strains that American back-to-the-land cultivators brought to Northern California in the 1970s to hybridize with the Mexican-origin sativa they had been growing. In stoner slang, "kush" subsequently came to mean potent, indica-heavy hybridized bud. It is easy to conjecture that West African purveyors of lower quality cannabis appropriated this word for stuff doctored with chemicals in a misguided attempt to boost potency. But now the word has come to mean, within the region, the doctored stuff itself.

In the US and Europe, so-called "synthetic marijuana" (an imprecise term favored by the media) is marketed under names such as "Spice" or "K2"—virtually any herbaceous material treated with a chemical concoction designed to mimic (however crudely) the effects of THC. New chemical compounds are developed to stay ahead of the law; when one compound is outlawed, manufacturers just tweak a molecule or two. The same subterfuge can be seen in the current craze for Delta-8 THC, plugged by purveyors (quite openly, in New York City) as legal because US federal law only references Delta-9.

A few years back, there was a spate of reports in New York about "zombielike" effects quite as ghastly if happily not as widespread as those now seen in Freetown, from a form of "synthetic marijuana" being marketed as "AK-47" or "24 Karat Gold." Lab tests determined that the chemical in question was a synthetic cannabinoid called AMB-FUBINACA, originally developed by the pharmaceutical company Pfizer. It was said to be 85 times as potent as Delta-9 THC.

The US Drug Enforcement Administration identifies AMB-FUBINACA as a controlled substance; case law in the United States has held that all psychoactive cannabinoids are covered by the language in the Controlled Substances Act that specifically references Delta-9. However, some tweaked chemical signatures have strayed far enough from THC that they can no longer be considered cannabinoids or cannabinoid analogues—which continues to pose a dilemma for law enforcement. The ambiguity about supposedly "hemp-derived" psychoactive cannabinoids since passage of the 2018 US Farm Bill has added to the confusion.

Then there was the 2012 case of a man shot by police in Miami while engaging in rather stomach-churning acts of ghoulish street violence. Sloppy media accounts said he had been under the influence of "a new form of LSD." But the small print revealed  that the substance involved was "bath salts," which may contain amphetamine-like chemicals such as methylenedioxypyrovalerone (MDPV), mephedrone, and pyrovalerone. Nothing whatsoever to do with lysergic acid diethylamide.

The legal atmosphere in Sierra Leone may be less exacting than in the US, but the apparently ever-morphing nature of the "Kush" formula also raises the question of under what statute each variation may be deemed illegal—as they all apparently are.

The mysterious case of "Kush" indicates that, especially in a traumatized society such as that of Sierra Leone, the lure of dubious and potentially dangerous chemical highs may go deeper than a mere impulse to skirt the law or beat prohibition-induced scarcity with pseudo-cannabis. However, media sensationalism offers little insight, and can even be seen as exploitative—especially when light on specifics.

Finally, it would be a bitter irony if the ill effects of a bad knock-off of an authentic product ended up contributing to the long-entrenched irrational stigma against the actually inoffensive authentic product. Reports should make clear that the West African chemical concoction has appropriated a name already in use for generations, spoken with pride by cultivators and aficionados.

 
Cross-post to Project CBD

 

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