(CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen, Greater Georgetown,
Guyana) In its bid to rid the Region of substance
misuse and abuse, the Caribbean Community (CARICOM)
Secretariat is pulling out all stops to reduce the
demand for and supply of illicit drugs.
Its most recent initiative is an offensive aimed
at reducing the supply of illicit drugs through
behaviour-change communication campaigns at the
national level.
In this regard, the Secretariat, with support
from the 9th EDF programme of the European
Commission, is training key stakeholders within
Member States to develop and use effective public
education and behaviour change communication
strategies to target female drug traffickers.
The rationale is to target women who are used as
drug couriers (mules), empower them through
education and present opportunities through an
enabling environment as an alternative to illicit
trafficking.
The first of a series of such capacity building
workshop takes place in Saint Lucia, on 26-27
November, where regional stakeholders, such as
directors of national drug councils, law enforcement
representatives, civic and non-governmental
organisations, and youth representatives will meet
to develop effective public education campaigns
ultimately aimed at reducing drug trafficking.
It is anticipated that at the end of the two
days, participants would have gained skills to be
able to develop their own campaigns and to relay the
training to other stakeholders in an effort to
assist key institutions in managing drug demand
reduction and contribute to supply reduction at the
national level.
The Workshop will also produce as one of its
tangible outcomes, a Draft handbook on Developing
Effective Public Education Campaigns Targeting
Illicit Traffickers. This handbook will be
further refined by a consultant and used as a guide
for CARICOM Member States.
Among the topics to be treated by regional
communication experts are: an introduction to
Behaviour Change Communication (BCC); developing
effective BCC Programmes and maximising message
exposure.
One of the primary campaign tools that Member
States will be trained to use as the centrepiece of
their public education campaigns is an animated
illustrative video titled Eva Goes to Foreign,
which, through a dramatic storyline, depicts the
social, physical and judicial consequences of
illicit trafficking by females.
At the workshop in Saint Lucia, this video will
be screened and used to illustrate some of the major
elements of an effective public education campaign.
Participants will also be trained in how to adapt
and localise the Eva Goes to Foreign video to
maximise its use in national public education
campaigns.
Contact:
piu@caricom.org