In-DepthSociety

Addicts struggle to take back their lives in Myanmar’s ‘House of Love’

At a rehab centre in Yangon, “lost” young men train their minds and bodies to overcome their debilitating addictions

More than a hundred shaven-headed men pour out of their Yangon hostel around 6am for a day of weightlifting, karate drills, dancing and Buddhist prayer—drug rehabilitation, Myanmar style.

The group of doctors, musicians, and street food vendors set off for a jog around a verdant, orchid-dotted compound, watched over by supervisors carrying heavy wooden sticks.

Welcome to another day at Metta Saneain—“House of Love” in Burmese—a rehab centre dishing out tough love to break the cycle of drug addiction.

Myanmar has long been a narcotics-producing powerhouse, with drugs fuelling and financing decades of internal conflict and authorities turning a blind eye to the billion-dollar industry.

The chaos unleashed by the military’s 2021 coup has gutted the legal economy and the country is now the world’s biggest producer of opium and a major source of methamphetamine, according to the United Nations.

Much. . .

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