29th April

Listening and reading comprehension

The World’s Deadliest Drug: Inside a Krokodil Cookhouse

About a decade ago, Russian doctors began to notice strange wounds on the bodies of

some drug addicts—patches of flesh turning dark and scaly, like a crocodile’s—in the

hospitals of Siberia and the Russian Far East. It didn’t take them long to discover the

cause: the patients had begun injecting a new drug they called, predictably, “krokodil.”

(Some accounts suggest the name was derived from one of the drug’s precursor

chemicals, alpha-chlorocodide.) Videos showing the effects of the “flesh-eating” drug—

christened desomorphine when it was invented for medical use in 1932—quickly went viral

online. There are now alarming stories that the monster could be at large in the U.S.

American drug-enforcement officials say fears of an imminent krokodil epidemic are

overblown. But it’s hard not to be frightened of a drug that leaves a reptilian mark on its

victims. Especially when it is so easy to make: an addict can cook up krokodil using

ingredients and tools bought from the local pharmacy and hardware store. The active

ingredient, codeine, is a mild opiate sold over the counter in many countries. Users mix

codeine with a brew of poisons such as paint thinner, hydrochloric acid and red

phosphorus scraped from the strike pads on matchboxes. The result—a murky yellow

liquid with an acrid stink—mimics the effect of heroin at a fraction of the cost. In Europe,

for example, a dose of krokodil costs just a few dollars, compared with about $20 for a hit

of heroin.

But addicts pay dearly for krokodil’s cheap high. Wherever on the body a user injects the

drug, blood vessels burst and surrounding tissue dies, sometimes falling off the bone in

chunks. That side effect has earned krokodil its other nickname: the zombie drug. The

typical life span of an addict is just two or three years.

The drug quickly became popular among Russian addicts. In 2005, the country’s

counternarcotics agency reported catching only “one-off” instances of the drug; six years

later, in the first three months of 2011, the agency confiscated 65 million doses, up 23-fold

from two years earlier. At its peak that year, krokodil use had spread to as many as a

million addicts in Russia.

A ban on over-the-counter codeine sales that was introduced on June 1, 2012, has

brought numbers down sharply, but Emanuele Satolli, an Italian photographer who has

been chronicling a group of Russian addicts, says many now score that key ingredient on

the black market. For the past year, Satolli has focused on the industrial city of

Yekaterinburg in the Ural Mountains, a place notorious in Russia for drug abuse,

photographing about a dozen krokodil addicts.

The krokodil epidemic may have peaked in Russia, but the drug’s use has already been

reported elsewhere. In October, a report published online in the American Journal of

Medicine confirmed the case of a 30-year-old addict in Richmond Heights, Mo., whose

finger “fell off” and whose skin began to rot after he began injecting krokodil. The monster

has crossed the ocean.


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