MOSCOW, March 30, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- Sasha is only 13, but he already has two years of hard drinking behind him.
He remembers well trying his first alcoholic drink, at age 11.
"The first time I drank it was a can of Jaguar -- it's a big can of cocktail that costs 33 rubles [$1.20]," Sasha said. "I liked it, the feeling alcohol gave me."
Now, Sasha is getting help for alcohol abuse at Kvartal (Quarter).
Modern Treatment
In that sense, he is luckier than child alcoholics receiving treatment in Russia's overcrowded, cash-strapped state hospitals.
Kvartal is a modern, friendly treatment center sited in a leafy courtyard in southern Moscow. It can house up to 25 children. Founded three years ago, this is Russia's only rehabilitation center for minors with alcohol and drug problems.
Despite being a state-run structure, Kvartal works closely with several humanitarian organizations -- including Doctors Without Borders -- and receives consistent financial aid from UNICEF, the United Nations Children's Fund.
Sasha says he likes it at the clinic.
But that does not mean he necessarily wants to overcome his drinking problem.
Reluctance Of Youth
The clinic's director, Veronika Gotlieb, says most child alcoholics are in denial about their addiction.
"The majority of these children do not want to change anything," Gotlieb said. "Children who have been sent by the police or by narcologists, for example, think they're doing just fine: 'Everyone drinks, it's normal, I don't have any problems. I drink until I'm half dead, but everyone does that.' What can you do with people who have no problems? Telling them 'this is bad, you can get sick, you can die,' does not work with teenagers, because they are not afraid of death, they don't fear for their lives."