Group Of Monks Fail Drug Test & Test Positive For Meth Pills That Cost As Low As RM2.53
Buddhist’s were taught that wisdom, kindness, patience, generosity and compassion were important virtues. Specifically, all Buddhists live by five moral precepts, which prohibit:
- Killing living things
- Taking what is not given
- Sexual misconduct
- Lying
- Using drugs or alcohol
Yet in Thailand, a Buddhist temple has been left stranded because all the monks, including the abbot, had failed a drug test and tested positive for methamphetamines.
Boonlert Thintapthai said the monks were subsequently sent to a health clinic to undergo drug rehabilitation.
The raid comes amidst a national campaign to tackle drug trafficking.
The monks were reportedly removed from the temple after police administered urine tests on Monday, which saw all four men failing the test. Officials did not say what had brought the temple to the attention of police.
“The temple is now empty of monks and nearby villagers are concerned they cannot do any merit-making,” he said. Merit-making involves worshippers donating food to monks as a good deed.
Boonlert said more monks will be sent to the temple to allow villagers to practise their religious obligations.
Thailand is a major transit country for methamphetamine from Myanmar’s troubled Shan State via Laos, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).
The Golden Triangle – the area where the borders of Thailand, Laos and Myanmar meet – and specifically Shan State, is believed to be the largest producer of meth in the world.
On the street, pills sell for less than 20 baht (RM2.53).
Last December, Thai authorities seized crystal methamphetamine with a street value of almost US$30 million stuffed inside boxing punch bags.
As for the monks, may they find peace in other ways besides hard drugs.