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The other war that should be stopped

Emma Bonino, MEP

Daily Times, Pakistan

Thursday 17 Apr 2003

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We must recognise that prohibition, rather than curtailing use,
generates crime, because it makes trading in illicit drugs a lucrative
business. As politicians everywhere remain loath to be seen as "soft on
drugs," something must be done to call attention to this remorseless
failure

The world's attention has been focused on the war on Iraq. But another
war - this one UN-sanctioned - has been going on simultaneously: the war
on drugs. In my view, every sensible person should want this largely
ignored war to end as well. While the UN should play a role in leading
Iraq toward a free and democratic society, it must also change
dramatically its own course in the war on drugs and lead the world to a
saner policy.

In 1998, to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the adoption of the third
Convention on Narcotic and Psychotropic substances, the United Nations
convened a special General Assembly session to discuss the issue of
illicit drugs. At the end of that forum, UN member states adopted a
political declaration that mandated the UN Drug Control Programme
(UNDCP) "to develop strategies with a view to eliminating or
significantly reducing the illicit cultivation of the coca bush, the
cannabis plant, and the opium poppy by the year 2008."

On April 16-17, the international community will re-convene in Vienna to
reckon with the results of the policies the UN has pursued. But five
years into the programme, one thing is clear: the results are grim.
According to a UNDCP report issued in 2002 called Illicit Drug Trends,
new markets for narcotics are expanding faster than old ones are being
shut down. Drug dealers, like sharp businessmen everywhere, have gone
out and found new markets. Eastern countries (the post-communist world
in Europe and the richer countries of Asia) are consuming more and more
drugs, because the older markets of Western Europe and North America are
saturated.

Across the world, narcotics trafficking is on the increase, not only
because new markets are coming online, but also because new countries
have taken up production. Moreover, new synthetic and chemical
substances, which are more potent and often less expensive than the
"classic" ones, are being invented.

It is time to acknowledge that the "war on drugs" is lost - indeed, a
monumental failure - and that hostilities should end.

Every aspect of the war strategy has failed. Harsh new domestic laws in
many countries have not only failed to control the spread of drugs
throughout the world, but have delivered a vast new source of state
intrusiveness into the lives of millions of people. Prohibition created
a pretext for authoritarian regimes to resist the abolition of death
penalty; yet even states that execute people for drug-related crimes
have not been able to stem the tide. To circumvent the harsh legal
regime now in place narcotics mafias have forged ever-tighter alliances
with terrorist networks.

Can the world afford to continue subsidising this failure? Can our money
be wasted for much longer on fumigating Colombian valleys or arresting
non-violent drug offenders? Can we - including those of us who are
elected officials - pretend that prohibitions on illicit drugs will one
day prove effective? The answer to all these questions, of course, is:
"No, we cannot."

Instead, we must recognise that prohibition, rather than curtailing use,
generates crime, because it makes trading in illicit drugs a lucrative
business. As politicians everywhere remain loath to be seen as "soft on
drugs," something must be done to call attention to this remorseless
failure. One ploy taken up by some members of my Transnational Radical
Party in France, Belgium, the UK, and Italy has been to "denounce
themselves" to their national authorities and then to disobey the
prohibitionist laws by distributing drugs to passers-by during political
demonstrations. By openly inviting the police to jail otherwise
respected members of the community, these activists hope to show the
absurdity of harsh anti-drug laws.

These Gandhian acts of non-violent civil disobedience have had an
effect. Recently, 109 members of the European Parliament introduced a
recommendation calling for reform of the UN Conventions on drugs. An
"International Anti-Prohibitionist League" is now at work, calling for
repeal or amendment of the UN treaties in order to allow for
experimentation with legalisation by individual nations.

At the upcoming Commission on Narcotics meeting in April, UN member
states will have an opportunity to reassess the effectiveness of the
1998 Plan of Action. Sadly, however, the reality of its failure to come
anywhere close to achieving its stated goals has not dented the minds of
national governments: not one state has voiced its opposition to current
strategies.

But turning a blind eye to failure only increases its cost. So long as
the UN anti-drug mandates remain in place, legalisation of treatments,
cures, and drugs that today are illicit - and recall that it was the end
of prohibition alone that ended the reign of gangsters like Al Capone in
the 1920s - will remain impossible.

The Vienna meeting offers a rare opportunity to change course. Instead
of insisting on replicating our failures, the world needs to adopt new
approaches that treat the disease of drug use, instead of criminalising
it. Otherwise, we will all remain addicted to a failed drug war. -DT-PS

(Emma Bonino is a Member of the European Parliament, a former EU
Commissioner, and a prominent member of the Transnational Radical Party)


 

 

 

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