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Canada Canada Could Be A World Leader In Smarter Drug

Editorial

Vancouver Sun

Friday 11 Mar 2005

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For the past three days, we have examined how the federal government's
prohibitionist approach to dealing with marijuana has utterly failed to
reduce the supply of, or demand for, the drug. Cannabis use appears to be
associated with cultural and social factors, rather than with the harshness
of the laws or the degree of their enforcement.

Nevertheless, successive governments have spent billions of dollars
enforcing the law, and organized crime has reaped billions of dollars in
profits from trade in marijuana and other illicit drugs. Marijuana laws
have made criminals out of pot smokers, and have allowed organized crime,
and its attendant violence, to flourish.

It was for these reasons that the LeDain Commission recommended 30 years
ago that Canada end the legal prohibition on marijuana possession. And it
was for these reasons that the Senate Committee on Illegal Drugs, in the
most comprehensive report on marijuana since LeDain, recommended in 2002
that trade in marijuana be legalized and regulated.

Finally, it was for these reasons that in 1998, dignitaries from Europe,
Latin America, Canada and the United States sent a letter to United Nations
Secretary General Kofi Annan declaring that the war on drugs, rather than
than drug use, has caused most of the social, political, legal and moral
problems associated with illicit drugs.

Despite the abundant evidence about the benefits of the legalization and
regulation of marijuana -- in addition to weakening (though not
eliminating) organized crime, regulation would allow governments to control
the strength and purity of marijuana, and would allow for coherent programs
aimed at prevention or responsible use -- no country in the world has
proceeded with legalization.

(De facto legalization exists in the Netherlands, but marijuana laws remain
on the books and those trading in large amounts of the drug remain subject
to prosecution, which ensures the continued existence of a criminal
underground there.)

Countries have failed to consider legalization for a number of reasons: The
U.S. has exerted enormous pressure on the world to maintain the war on
drugs, and it often ties foreign aid to a country's commitment to
prosecuting that war. Even countries that rely only on U.S. trade, not aid
-- such as Canada -- face ferocious opposition from the U.S. anytime
legalization, or even decriminalization, is discussed. If we needed any
more evidence on this score, we got it in spades on Wednesday. U.S. drug
czar John Walters linked the increasing number of American teenagers
seeking addiction treatment with Canadian pot exports.

In addition, most Western nations are signatories to a number of
international conventions that require them to maintain legal proscriptions
against trade in marijuana. Not surprisingly, the U.S. played a pivotal
role in the promulgation of these conventions.

Despite the intransigence of the U.S. and the existence of international
protocols against marijuana legalization, many countries recognize the
folly of the war on drugs, and are, therefore, open to discussing
legalization and regulation. Canada is particularly well suited to
promoting such discussions.

After all, the Canadian justice system is admired throughout the world, and
Canada has already taken some novel approaches to deal with drug abuse. In
addition to the possible decriminalization of marijuana through the new
bill before Parliament, Vancouver is host to a supervised-injection site
for heroin addicts, and several Canadian cities, including Vancouver, are
participating in the North American Opiate Medication Initiative, which is
studying the effects of prescribing heroin to hardcore addicts.

Both the supervised-injection site and the NAOMI trials are the subjects of
scientific studies, and the government should also assess the impact of
marijuana decriminalization should that become a reality. By developing a
national office on drug policy and a national strategy on drugs, Canada
could gather and disseminate the effects of these novel approaches to drug
use. In concert with the many European nations that are taking similar
steps, Canada could take a leading role in prompting discussion about
alternatives to marijuana prohibition.

The U.S. might well remain intransigent, but as the international community
harnesses and distributes more and more evidence about the harm caused by
the war on marijuana, some nations might feel empowered to consider
marijuana legalization and regulation on a trial basis. Should such trials
prove successful, other countries would likely follow.

All of this must begin, though, with a commitment from Ottawa to develop a
national drug strategy, and to communicate the results of its work to the
world. The world is not losing the war on marijuana: It's a war we've
already lost. Canada can help to unify the globe in its efforts to minimize
the harms caused not only by drugs, but by drug laws.







 

 

 

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