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Opium in Singapore

Opium was first recorded in Singapore by a written document that record Stamford Raffles gifting opium to a local ruler in 1819 to establish Singapore.[1] Opium then became accessible through trading and the opium farms in Singapore in the 19th century.[2] It is one of the most traded good along the Sea Trade route after the end of the Opium Wars. With the rise of opium farms in Singapore, they acted as the middleman that help to process raw opium imported from British India, Persia, and Turkey to consumable opium and retail them to the Chinese coolies in local.[2] In 1946, opium, including the tools (opium pipes and opium lamps), and opium dens are completely banned in Singapore. To treat the opium addicts, an Opium Treatment Centre was opened in 1955 and in 1989, the Singapore government extends the death penalty for opium traffickers.

Chinese smoking opium

Early history edit

Historical account suggest that the first appearance of opium (Papaver somniferum) in Singapore was in a written document that states Stamford Raffles offer the ruler Temenggong Abdul Rahman opium as a gift after signing a treaty with him to establish Singapore in 1819.[1] Prior to this, opium was legalised and commonly used in Europe, Middle East, US, and China for centuries as a form of medicine; while opium smoking was seen as a common practice.

1819-1942: Colonial rule edit

Opium prohibition in China started in 1729 but there was still the use of opium due to smuggling of opium from the British as they have an increasing urge to trade opium with China for the demands of Chinese teas. To put a complete stop on opium use, destruction of opium was made under the command of the Daoguang Emperor. This led to the outbreak of opium wars. When the wars ended, the British signed treaties with China, promising the trade of opium. After this, opium trading was common in the Sea trade route from Britain to China.[3]

When Singapore became a trading port of Britain, it executes the policy of free trade. Singapore then, imported and exported large amounts of opium from British India, Persia (now Iran), and Turkey to China and Britain which make it one of the most traded item along the Sea trade route. Subsequently, when Singapore opens up for settlement, Chinese immigrants and British Indians formed new labour forces for the economic activities in Singapore. However, the Chinese immigrants had previously been introduced to opium back in China and continued the habit of opium-smoking in Singapore. Opium thus became a commodity locally and is popular among the immigrants Chinese population.[4] At that time, not only was opium legal, opium-smoking was also seen as a common social practice for both the rich and the poor Chinese immigrants; offering opium pipes were alike serving them teas.[5] Singapore as a trading port traded 1285 chests of opium in 1836 and increased to 4689 chests of opium in 1856.[6]

Opium farms edit

Before 1819, there were existing similar opium farms in earlier settlements of Penang and Melaka; it is common throughout the colonised states in Asia as a way for colonial countries to generate revenue from the foreign population.[2]

After turning Singapore into a trading port, the British deployed an opium tax farming system to gain revenue; in 1830, the Opium Regulation was passed.[7] The Singapore farms however, did nothing related to agriculture. The farmers purchased raw opium which was imported from other states, processed it into chandu , and distributes it to local opium shops for retail consumption by the Chinese coolies population.[2]

Before the 1840s, no exact record of opium farms was found. It was in 1845 to 1860 that there were records of opium farms under Tay Eng Long, Lao Joon Teck, and Cheang Sam Teo. Between 1847 and 1853, the Temenggong was receiving $350 per month as rental fees for his opium and spirit farms. However, seeing the growth in population in Singapore and the demand for opium, they raise the rental fees for every new contract negotiation. In 1860, the rental fees increased to $8,000 per month.[8] From 1860s onwards, there were increasingly competition for opium farms; forces of Johor farmers and Singapore farmers were openly fighting each other.[9] Opium dens controlled by the farmers, spurred up rapidly with the secret societies.[10]

Opium preparation edit

The Chinese farms had a procedure of making opium into chandu which is the process of making raw opium into consumable opium.

The process was described as followed:

Two balls of opium are cut open and their contents put into an iron pan which is placed on a slow fire; a man keep stirring it with a piece of wood till the whole is dissolved ; it is then divided and placed in two pans, these are inverted over the fire and baked till all moisture is absorbed. The opium can then be peeled off in slices. The hide or skin which was stripped off the ball is boiled in water till all of the opium is extracted from it. The water is then strained and poured over the slices of opium which are placed in pans. Baskets are now prepared by lining them with several layers of common China paper, and they are filled with the slices of opium and placed over pans... the pans are then taken off the fire, placed on the ground and the chandu cooled with fans. When quite cooled it is poured into boxes ready for sales.[11]

Opium revenue edit

Singapore was one of the biggest distributors of opium and it became the central economy of Singapore. Opium was seen as the most valuable commodity that generates about fifty percent of the total revenue from 1820 to 1860.[2] From 1896 to 1906, the average annual revenue from opium was 49 percent of the total income of the Straits Settlements, of which Singapore was a part.[12]

Local consumption edit

In the early 19th century, due to the abolishment of slavery in Europe, a new labour force emerged to fill in the need. Combined with the political unrest and economic instability in China, many Chinese went overseas to search for opportunities. These Chinese labourers eventually landed in Singapore under the motivation of the British and became known as coolies. The Chinese coolies became the working class and occupies a huge population in Singapore. Many of these coolies were bachelors and had no activities during their free time, hence, they were attracted to opium dens and brothels where drugs were commonly smoked.[10] Opium was also used as a form of controlling method to control the Chinese coolies. Chinese merchants and farmers would encouraged the habit of opium smoking and allowed purchases of opium on credits for the coolies. Opium cost two-third of the coolies' wages and thereby making sure the coolies had to continue working for them to pay of their credits.[1]

Opposition of opium edit

In 1906, the Chinese associations and social reformers such as Chen Su Lan and Lim Boon Keng formed the Singapore Anti-Opium Society to help opium addicts to wean off the drug.[13] The society has western educated Strait-Chinese figures acted as moral guidelines to advocate the elimination of opium smoking. Chen Su Lan, a member of the society and a medical doctor, has established Anti-Opium Clinic on Kampong Java Road in May 1933 with the motivation of the Singapore Anti-Opium Society.[14]

1942-1955: Japanese Occupation and post war edit

During the Japanese Occupation (1942–1945), opium smoking was encouraged by the Japanese and a subject of politicised tool to ensure the Chinese population remained servile and did not collectively resist the occupation.[1] After the Japanese Occupation, in October 1945, the British Military Administrative announced the banning of opium in Malaya.[15] The population addicted to opium were approximately 16,000 in 1946, and even more before the war.[16]

Before the war, the addicts got their supplies from the government monopoly; however, following the execution of the ban, the individuals could only obtain opium for medical purposes or through illicit markets. Opium trafficking continued from 1947 to 1958 with the syndicates having agents as crew members on ships to transport opium. Traffickers continued and succeed were mainly due to

  1. The inability of the Customs Department as the sole enforcement authority, with its limited resources, to meet the challenge of both illicit import and domestic consumption;
  2. The preoccupation of senior customs officers with problems of reconstruction after the war;
  3. Corruption amongst subordinate staff.[16]

Opium dens also operated illegally with 1,571 opium saloons recorded in 1949.[17] The Singapore police force had carried out a total number of 14,556 raids on opium dens from 1952 to 1955, with 2,209 raids in 1952 (July-Dec), 4,831 in 1953, 3,796 in 1954, and 3,720 in 1955. During the raids, they arrested both the addicts and owners, seized opium pipes, opium lamps, raw and processed opium. Opium addicts caught in raids were charged in court and sent to prison.[18] In 1954, a bill amending the Dangerous Drugs Ordinance was raised in the Legislative Council to provide for the establishment of an opium treatment centre.[18]

The Narcotics Bureau also known as the Central Narcotics Intelligence Bureau was a newly formed department within the Custom department to assist campaign against trafficking. It has an extensive networks with twenty-six countries to exchange information with. The establishment of the Narcotics Bureau had led to the seizures of opium. In 1954 and 1955, twelve leading traffickers were either banished or imprisoned, while others fled the country.[16]

1955-present edit

The Opium Treatment Centre raised by the Legislative Council for the treatment and rehabilitation of addicts was located on St. John's Island and started its operations in February 1955; the medical officer in charge was Leong Hon Koon. The treatment and rehabilitation were done in coherent with proper ethics, that is the addict would be seen as a patient to be treated medically instead of an ill-doer and that it will be treated as a person with treatment being total.[16]

The total treatment of the addict, as a person, consists of three phases:

  1. The withdrawal phase.
  2. The phase of rehabilitation and re-education.
  3. The follow-up phase - a continuation of the first two phases.[16]

On 30 November 1989, the Singapore government passed a bill to extend the death penalty to cocaine, cannabis and opium traffickers including manufacturers, importers and exporters.[19]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Abdullah, Noorman (2005). Exploring constructions of the "drug problem" in historical and contemporary Singapore. Singapore: Department of Sociology, National University of Singapore. p. 40-70. ISBN 981303369X.
  2. ^ a b c d e Trocki, Carl A. (1987). "The Rise of Singapore's Great Opium Syndicate, 1840–86". Journal of Southeast Asian Studies. 18 (1): 60. doi:10.1017/s0022463400001259. ISSN 0022-4634.
  3. ^ Miron, Jeffrey; Feige, Chris (2005). "The Opium Wars, Opium Legalization, and Opium Consumption in China". Cambridge, MA. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. ^ Abdullah, Noorman (2005). Exploring constructions of the "drug problem" in historical and contemporary Singapore. Singapore: Department of Sociology, National University of Singapore. p. 40-70. ISBN 981303369X.
  5. ^ Wang, Te-feng (1996). Substance use in Singapore : illegal drugs, inhalants and alcohol. Toppan Co. ISBN 981-00-7069-1. OCLC 37366242.
  6. ^ Wong, Lin Ken (2003). The trade of Singapore, 1819-69. Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. OCLC 972379401.
  7. ^ Turnbull, C. M. (2009). A history of modern Singapore, 1819-2005. Singapore: NUS Press. ISBN 978-9971-69-343-5. OCLC 489265927.
  8. ^ Trocki, Carl A. (1987). "The Rise of Singapore's Great Opium Syndicate, 1840–86". Journal of Southeast Asian Studies. 18 (1): 68. doi:10.1017/s0022463400001259. ISSN 0022-4634.
  9. ^ Trocki, Carl A. (1987). "The Rise of Singapore's Great Opium Syndicate, 1840-86". Journal of Southeast Asian Studies. 18 (1): 70. ISSN 0022-4634.
  10. ^ a b Warren, James Francis (1995). "Capitalism and addiction-the Chinese, revenue farming, and opium in colonial Singapore and Java, 1800–1910". Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars. 27 (1): 59–72. doi:10.1080/14672715.1995.10413075. ISSN 0007-4810.
  11. ^ Vaughan, J. D. (1879). The manners and customs of the Chinese of the Straits Settlements. Printed at the Mission Press. OCLC 51359703.
  12. ^ Ong Siang, Song (1967). One hundred years' history of the Chinese in Singapore : being a chronological record of the contribution by the Chinese community to the development, progress and prosperity of Singapore ; of events and incidents concerning the whole or sections of that community ; and of the lives, pursuits and public service of individual members thereof from the foundation of Singapore on 6th February 1819 to its centenary on 6th February 1919. ISBN 981-12-1768-8. OCLC 1136872715.
  13. ^ Trocki, Carl A. Opium and Empire : Chinese Society in Colonial Singapore, 1800-1910. ISBN 978-1-5017-4635-2. OCLC 1114834234.
  14. ^ "BIRTHDAY OF ANTI-OPIUM CLINIC". The Straits Times. 21 May 1934. p. 13.
  15. ^ "Goodbye, Opium". Straits Times. NewspaperSG. p. 2.
  16. ^ a b c d e "UNODC - Bulletin on Narcotics - 1958 Issue 4 - 002". United Nations : Office on Drugs and Crime. Retrieved 2023-02-24.
  17. ^ "1,415 Dens for Opium Smokers". Straits Times. p. 6.
  18. ^ a b "War on Opium". Straits Times. 14 October 1954. p. 8.
  19. ^ "Government gazette. Acts supplement". eservice.nlb.gov.sg. Retrieved 2023-02-24.

opium, singapore, this, article, need, rewritten, comply, with, wikipedia, quality, standards, tense, incorrect, help, talk, page, contain, suggestions, 2023, opium, first, recorded, singapore, written, document, that, record, stamford, raffles, gifting, opium. This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards as the tense is incorrect You can help The talk page may contain suggestions May 2023 Opium was first recorded in Singapore by a written document that record Stamford Raffles gifting opium to a local ruler in 1819 to establish Singapore 1 Opium then became accessible through trading and the opium farms in Singapore in the 19th century 2 It is one of the most traded good along the Sea Trade route after the end of the Opium Wars With the rise of opium farms in Singapore they acted as the middleman that help to process raw opium imported from British India Persia and Turkey to consumable opium and retail them to the Chinese coolies in local 2 In 1946 opium including the tools opium pipes and opium lamps and opium dens are completely banned in Singapore To treat the opium addicts an Opium Treatment Centre was opened in 1955 and in 1989 the Singapore government extends the death penalty for opium traffickers Chinese smoking opium Contents 1 Early history 2 1819 1942 Colonial rule 2 1 Opium farms 2 1 1 Opium preparation 2 1 2 Opium revenue 2 1 3 Local consumption 2 2 Opposition of opium 3 1942 1955 Japanese Occupation and post war 4 1955 present 5 ReferencesEarly history editHistorical account suggest that the first appearance of opium Papaver somniferum in Singapore was in a written document that states Stamford Raffles offer the ruler Temenggong Abdul Rahman opium as a gift after signing a treaty with him to establish Singapore in 1819 1 Prior to this opium was legalised and commonly used in Europe Middle East US and China for centuries as a form of medicine while opium smoking was seen as a common practice 1819 1942 Colonial rule editSee also History of opium in China Opium prohibition in China started in 1729 but there was still the use of opium due to smuggling of opium from the British as they have an increasing urge to trade opium with China for the demands of Chinese teas To put a complete stop on opium use destruction of opium was made under the command of the Daoguang Emperor This led to the outbreak of opium wars When the wars ended the British signed treaties with China promising the trade of opium After this opium trading was common in the Sea trade route from Britain to China 3 When Singapore became a trading port of Britain it executes the policy of free trade Singapore then imported and exported large amounts of opium from British India Persia now Iran and Turkey to China and Britain which make it one of the most traded item along the Sea trade route Subsequently when Singapore opens up for settlement Chinese immigrants and British Indians formed new labour forces for the economic activities in Singapore However the Chinese immigrants had previously been introduced to opium back in China and continued the habit of opium smoking in Singapore Opium thus became a commodity locally and is popular among the immigrants Chinese population 4 At that time not only was opium legal opium smoking was also seen as a common social practice for both the rich and the poor Chinese immigrants offering opium pipes were alike serving them teas 5 Singapore as a trading port traded 1285 chests of opium in 1836 and increased to 4689 chests of opium in 1856 6 Opium farms edit Before 1819 there were existing similar opium farms in earlier settlements of Penang and Melaka it is common throughout the colonised states in Asia as a way for colonial countries to generate revenue from the foreign population 2 After turning Singapore into a trading port the British deployed an opium tax farming system to gain revenue in 1830 the Opium Regulation was passed 7 The Singapore farms however did nothing related to agriculture The farmers purchased raw opium which was imported from other states processed it into chandu and distributes it to local opium shops for retail consumption by the Chinese coolies population 2 Before the 1840s no exact record of opium farms was found It was in 1845 to 1860 that there were records of opium farms under Tay Eng Long Lao Joon Teck and Cheang Sam Teo Between 1847 and 1853 the Temenggong was receiving 350 per month as rental fees for his opium and spirit farms However seeing the growth in population in Singapore and the demand for opium they raise the rental fees for every new contract negotiation In 1860 the rental fees increased to 8 000 per month 8 From 1860s onwards there were increasingly competition for opium farms forces of Johor farmers and Singapore farmers were openly fighting each other 9 Opium dens controlled by the farmers spurred up rapidly with the secret societies 10 Opium preparation edit The Chinese farms had a procedure of making opium into chandu which is the process of making raw opium into consumable opium The process was described as followed Two balls of opium are cut open and their contents put into an iron pan which is placed on a slow fire a man keep stirring it with a piece of wood till the whole is dissolved it is then divided and placed in two pans these are inverted over the fire and baked till all moisture is absorbed The opium can then be peeled off in slices The hide or skin which was stripped off the ball is boiled in water till all of the opium is extracted from it The water is then strained and poured over the slices of opium which are placed in pans Baskets are now prepared by lining them with several layers of common China paper and they are filled with the slices of opium and placed over pans the pans are then taken off the fire placed on the ground and the chandu cooled with fans When quite cooled it is poured into boxes ready for sales 11 Opium revenue edit Singapore was one of the biggest distributors of opium and it became the central economy of Singapore Opium was seen as the most valuable commodity that generates about fifty percent of the total revenue from 1820 to 1860 2 From 1896 to 1906 the average annual revenue from opium was 49 percent of the total income of the Straits Settlements of which Singapore was a part 12 Local consumption edit In the early 19th century due to the abolishment of slavery in Europe a new labour force emerged to fill in the need Combined with the political unrest and economic instability in China many Chinese went overseas to search for opportunities These Chinese labourers eventually landed in Singapore under the motivation of the British and became known as coolies The Chinese coolies became the working class and occupies a huge population in Singapore Many of these coolies were bachelors and had no activities during their free time hence they were attracted to opium dens and brothels where drugs were commonly smoked 10 Opium was also used as a form of controlling method to control the Chinese coolies Chinese merchants and farmers would encouraged the habit of opium smoking and allowed purchases of opium on credits for the coolies Opium cost two third of the coolies wages and thereby making sure the coolies had to continue working for them to pay of their credits 1 Opposition of opium edit In 1906 the Chinese associations and social reformers such as Chen Su Lan and Lim Boon Keng formed the Singapore Anti Opium Society to help opium addicts to wean off the drug 13 The society has western educated Strait Chinese figures acted as moral guidelines to advocate the elimination of opium smoking Chen Su Lan a member of the society and a medical doctor has established Anti Opium Clinic on Kampong Java Road in May 1933 with the motivation of the Singapore Anti Opium Society 14 1942 1955 Japanese Occupation and post war editDuring the Japanese Occupation 1942 1945 opium smoking was encouraged by the Japanese and a subject of politicised tool to ensure the Chinese population remained servile and did not collectively resist the occupation 1 After the Japanese Occupation in October 1945 the British Military Administrative announced the banning of opium in Malaya 15 The population addicted to opium were approximately 16 000 in 1946 and even more before the war 16 Before the war the addicts got their supplies from the government monopoly however following the execution of the ban the individuals could only obtain opium for medical purposes or through illicit markets Opium trafficking continued from 1947 to 1958 with the syndicates having agents as crew members on ships to transport opium Traffickers continued and succeed were mainly due to The inability of the Customs Department as the sole enforcement authority with its limited resources to meet the challenge of both illicit import and domestic consumption The preoccupation of senior customs officers with problems of reconstruction after the war Corruption amongst subordinate staff 16 Opium dens also operated illegally with 1 571 opium saloons recorded in 1949 17 The Singapore police force had carried out a total number of 14 556 raids on opium dens from 1952 to 1955 with 2 209 raids in 1952 July Dec 4 831 in 1953 3 796 in 1954 and 3 720 in 1955 During the raids they arrested both the addicts and owners seized opium pipes opium lamps raw and processed opium Opium addicts caught in raids were charged in court and sent to prison 18 In 1954 a bill amending the Dangerous Drugs Ordinance was raised in the Legislative Council to provide for the establishment of an opium treatment centre 18 The Narcotics Bureau also known as the Central Narcotics Intelligence Bureau was a newly formed department within the Custom department to assist campaign against trafficking It has an extensive networks with twenty six countries to exchange information with The establishment of the Narcotics Bureau had led to the seizures of opium In 1954 and 1955 twelve leading traffickers were either banished or imprisoned while others fled the country 16 1955 present editThe Opium Treatment Centre raised by the Legislative Council for the treatment and rehabilitation of addicts was located on St John s Island and started its operations in February 1955 the medical officer in charge was Leong Hon Koon The treatment and rehabilitation were done in coherent with proper ethics that is the addict would be seen as a patient to be treated medically instead of an ill doer and that it will be treated as a person with treatment being total 16 The total treatment of the addict as a person consists of three phases The withdrawal phase The phase of rehabilitation and re education The follow up phase a continuation of the first two phases 16 On 30 November 1989 the Singapore government passed a bill to extend the death penalty to cocaine cannabis and opium traffickers including manufacturers importers and exporters 19 References edit a b c d Abdullah Noorman 2005 Exploring constructions of the drug problem in historical and contemporary Singapore Singapore Department of Sociology National University of Singapore p 40 70 ISBN 981303369X a b c d e Trocki Carl A 1987 The Rise of Singapore s Great Opium Syndicate 1840 86 Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 18 1 60 doi 10 1017 s0022463400001259 ISSN 0022 4634 Miron Jeffrey Feige Chris 2005 The Opium Wars Opium Legalization and Opium Consumption in China Cambridge MA a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Abdullah Noorman 2005 Exploring constructions of the drug problem in historical and contemporary Singapore Singapore Department of Sociology National University of Singapore p 40 70 ISBN 981303369X Wang Te feng 1996 Substance use in Singapore illegal drugs inhalants and alcohol Toppan Co ISBN 981 00 7069 1 OCLC 37366242 Wong Lin Ken 2003 The trade of Singapore 1819 69 Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society OCLC 972379401 Turnbull C M 2009 A history of modern Singapore 1819 2005 Singapore NUS Press ISBN 978 9971 69 343 5 OCLC 489265927 Trocki Carl A 1987 The Rise of Singapore s Great Opium Syndicate 1840 86 Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 18 1 68 doi 10 1017 s0022463400001259 ISSN 0022 4634 Trocki Carl A 1987 The Rise of Singapore s Great Opium Syndicate 1840 86 Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 18 1 70 ISSN 0022 4634 a b Warren James Francis 1995 Capitalism and addiction the Chinese revenue farming and opium in colonial Singapore and Java 1800 1910 Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars 27 1 59 72 doi 10 1080 14672715 1995 10413075 ISSN 0007 4810 Vaughan J D 1879 The manners and customs of the Chinese of the Straits Settlements Printed at the Mission Press OCLC 51359703 Ong Siang Song 1967 One hundred years history of the Chinese in Singapore being a chronological record of the contribution by the Chinese community to the development progress and prosperity of Singapore of events and incidents concerning the whole or sections of that community and of the lives pursuits and public service of individual members thereof from the foundation of Singapore on 6th February 1819 to its centenary on 6th February 1919 ISBN 981 12 1768 8 OCLC 1136872715 Trocki Carl A Opium and Empire Chinese Society in Colonial Singapore 1800 1910 ISBN 978 1 5017 4635 2 OCLC 1114834234 BIRTHDAY OF ANTI OPIUM CLINIC The Straits Times 21 May 1934 p 13 Goodbye Opium Straits Times NewspaperSG p 2 a b c d e UNODC Bulletin on Narcotics 1958 Issue 4 002 United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime Retrieved 2023 02 24 1 415 Dens for Opium Smokers Straits Times p 6 a b War on Opium Straits Times 14 October 1954 p 8 Government gazette Acts supplement eservice nlb gov sg Retrieved 2023 02 24 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Opium in Singapore amp oldid 1170156510, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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