Basuco is the term used for cocaine paste in Colombia. The name comes from the Spanish words "base (de) cocaina" (cocaine base), and a wordplay with bazuca (bazooka). Basuco is usually smoked, either rolled into a cigarette with tobacco or cannabis or inhaled through homemade pipes. Another term for it is "bazoca," meaning "big mouth," possibly because workers hid it in their mouths to smuggle it into prisons—an offense punishable by death in cartels. In Western countries, it was sometimes called "bazooka". The slang "Bazooka Joe" was used to ask about purity and quantity in drug deals. Originally, basuco was a waste product from cocaine production. Unlike powdered cocaine (which dissolves in water but burns when heated), basuco can be smoked but not snorted. To test purity, a known amount would be dissolved, filtered, and weighed before and after extraction. A less pure form, called "candy rock," often contained leftover cuts like sodium chloride. Basuco is extremely addictive and considered stronger than crack cocaine in Europe and America. Per the
UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) in Colombia there were 4,644 basuco users in
Bogotá alone; the drug's illicitness and accompanying homelessness prohibit an accurate count. Since September 2012, a "Mobile Centre for Attention to Drug Addicts" (CAMAD) has been providing basic human services with an interdisciplinary team moving by bus in Bogota's worst affected neighbourhoods and working in a prison. Three hospitals participate with walk-in treatment, amongst them the public Hospital Centro Oriente.
Gustavo Petro, the former
Mayor of Bogotá and current
President of Colombia, established CAMAD before finishing his second term as mayor in October 2015, and the future of the program is uncertain. Since CAMAD cannot offer services such as HIV testing,
needle exchange, or safe injection sites, its "current levels of progress are not comparable with those of countries that have invested greater resources in the implementation of such schemes", per UNODOC. CAMAD has been criticised by a Colombian non-governmental organisation called "Technical Social Action" (ATS) for not doing enough, and also by "right-leaning politicians and the public for negotiating terms with the criminal gangs that control [certain] areas". ==
Paco in Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay==