
-
Hong Kong fans queue for opening of Cristiano Ronaldo exhibition
-
Itoje back as Lions take no chances against ACT Brumbies
-
Stock markets struggle as Trump's tariff deadline looms
-
Nearly 450,000 Afghans left Iran since June 1: IOM
-
North Korea bars Western influencers from trade fair tour
-
Typhoon Danas kills two, injures hundreds in Taiwan
-
Dutch coastal village turns to tech to find lost fishermen
-
Boxer Chavez's appeal against arrest if deported from US rejected: Mexico prosecutor
-
India captain Gill hailed back home after 'brilliant' Test win
-
The making of Australia's mushroom murders
-
Indonesia volcano spews 18-kilometre ash tower
-
Youthful Chelsea ready for Thiago Silva reunion at Club World Cup
-
Australian inquiry cites racism in Indigenous shooting
-
Djokovic wary despite Wimbledon form, dominant Sinner faces Dimitrov
-
Australian woman found guilty of triple murder with toxic mushrooms
-
Indonesia volcano spews 18-kilometre ash tower: agency
-
Trump says to send first tariff letters on Monday
-
The strange case of Evgeniya Mayboroda, Russia's rebel retiree
-
Asian markets drop as Trump's tariff deadline looms
-
Under-strength Brumbies eye 'big opportunity' against Lions
-
Macron to rekindle relationship with Francophile King Charles on UK visit
-
Trump hosts Netanyahu, hopes for Israel-Hamas deal 'this week'
-
Pressed to confess: Japan accused of 'hostage justice'
-
Demna to bow out at Balenciaga in Paris Haute Couture Week
-
Host of internationals in Australia-New Zealand squad to face Lions
-
Egyptian conservators give King Tut's treasures new glow
-
Mexico defeat USA 2-1 to retain CONCACAF Gold Cup
-
Visa's 24/7 war room takes on global cybercriminals
-
BRICS nations slam Trump tariffs, condemn strikes on Iran
-
BioNxt's Sublingual Cladribine Program for MS Ready for Next Phase
-
Guardian Metal Resources PLC Announces Pilot North Tungsten Project Acquired via Staking
-
MLB Nationals fire manager Martinez, GM Rizzo after loss
-
US tariffs to kick in Aug 1, barring trade deals
-
Trump slams former ally Musk's political party as 'ridiculous'
-
Three things we learned from the second England-India Test
-
Norway reach Euro 2025 quarter-finals as Swiss down eliminated Iceland
-
Alcaraz vows to avoid Murray after defeat on golf course
-
Alcaraz finds magic touch at Wimbledon as Sabalenka storms into quarter-finals
-
Run-hungry Gill glad to 'lead by example' as India level England series
-
Rockets confirm arrival of Durant in unprecedented NBA seven-team trade
-
Alcaraz survives Rublev test to stay on course for Wimbledon hat-trick
-
New Zealand's Dixon wins seventh IndyCar Mid-Ohio title
-
US tariffs to kick in Aug 1, barring trade deals: Bessent
-
England consider Archer and Atkinson recall after heavy India defeat
-
Durant deal becomes NBA-record seven-team trade: reports
-
Verstappen laments 'really difficult' Silverstone fifth
-
BRICS nations hit out at Trump tariffs
-
Hansen shoots Norway to brink of Euro 2025 quarter-finals
-
Jennifer Geerlings-Simons becomes Suriname's first woman president
-
Netanyahu says Trump meeting could 'advance' Gaza deal ahead of Doha talks

Addictions on the rise in wartime Israel
At 19, Israeli man Yoni has to put aside his plans to join the military and instead enter rehab for drug abuse that has worsened since Hamas's October 7 attack.
Health professionals said Yoni's case is not an exception in wartime Israel, noting a surge in drug and alcohol abuse as well as other addictive behaviours.
Yoni, who asked to use a pseudonym to protect his privacy, told AFP he had started taking drugs recreationally before, but "after the war it seemed to really get worse".
"It's just a way to escape from reality, this whole thing," said the resident of Beersheba in southern Israel who lost a friend, Nir Beizer, in the Hamas attack that sparked the ongoing Gaza war.
Psychiatrist Shaul Lev-Ran, founder of the Israel Center on Addiction, said that "as a natural reaction to emotional stress and as a search for relief, we've seen a spectacular rise in the consumption of various addictive sedative substances."
A study carried out by his team, based in the central city of Netanya, found "a connection between indirect exposure to the October 7 events and an increase in addictive substances consumption" of about 25 percent.
Lev-Ran told AFP they have identified a rise in the use of "prescription drugs, illegal drugs, alcohol, or addictive behaviour like gambling".
One in four Israelis have increased their addictive substance use, according to the study, which was conducted in November and December on a representative sample of 1,000 Israelis. In 2022, before the war, one in seven struggled with drug addiction.
Contacted by AFP, the Palestinian Authority said there was no equivalent data on addiction and mental health for the Palestinian territories.
- 'Shock' -
The October 7 attack, when Palestinian militants stormed into southern Israel and attacked towns, communities, army bases and an outdoor rave, caused a real "shock" in Israeli society, Lev-Ran said.
The study found that "the closer individuals were to the trauma on October 7, the higher the risk" of addictive behaviours.
The Hamas attack resulted in the deaths of 1,198 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
Militants also seized 251 people, 111 of whom are still captive in Gaza, including 39 the Israeli military says are dead.
Israel's retaliatory military campaign in the Gaza Strip has killed at least 39,790 people, according to health ministry of the Hamas-run territory, which does not give details of civilian and militant deaths.
The Israel Center on Addiction study found an increase in addictive substance consumption among survivors of the October 7 attack, but also among Israelis displaced since then from communities near the Gaza border or in the north, near Lebanon.
"Some who had never consumed addictive substances started using cannabis, some used substances but increased their use, and some were already treated for addiction and relapsed", said Lev-Ran.
- 'Forget' -
Lev-Rab said Israel was already "at the outset of an epidemic in which large swathes of the population will develop an addiction to substances".
The study found that the use of sleeping pills and painkillers has also skyrocketed, by 180 percent and 70 percent respectively.
The psychiatrist gave the example of one of his patients, a man who demanded "something" to help him cope and be able to sleep while his son was fighting in Gaza.
At a bar in Jerusalem, Matan, a soldier deployed to the Palestinian territory who gave only his first name for privacy concerns, told AFP that using drugs "helps forget" the harsh reality.
Yoni said that in the early months of the war, his friends and him would take "party drugs like ecstasy, MDMA, LSD" recreationally "in order not to be bored and not to be afraid".
Then, Yoni started taking drugs "alone at home", which he said eventually led him to realise "that I need to go to rehab".
Once out, he wants to complete his military service, Yoni said, to "prove to myself, prove to the family, that I am indeed capable of more, and (can) contribute to the community like everyone else".
M.A.Colin--AMWN