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Kofi Annan: Why I'm calling to end the war on drugs
From Linkedin.
"In my experience, good public policy is best shaped by the
dispassionate analysis of what in practice has worked, or not. Policy
based on common assumptions and popular sentiments can become a recipe
for mistaken prescriptions and misguided interventions.
Nowhere is this divorce between rhetoric and reality more evident
than in the formulation of global drug policies, where too often
emotions and ideology rather than evidence have prevailed.
Take the case of the medical use of cannabis. By looking carefully at
the evidence from the United States, we now know that legalizing the
use of cannabis for medical purposes has not, as opponents argued, led
to an increase in its use by teenagers. By contrast, there has been a
near tripling of American deaths from heroin overdoses between 2010 and
2013, even though the law and its severe punishments remain unchanged.
This year, between April 19 and 21, the United Nations General
Assembly will hold a special session on drugs and the world will have a
chance to change course. As we approach that event, we need to
ask ourselves if we are on the right policy path. More specifically, how
do we deal with what the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
has called the "unintended consequences" of the policies of the last 50
years, which have helped, among other things, to create a vast,
international criminal market in drugs that fuels violence, corruption
and instability? Just think of the 16,000 murders in Mexico in 2013,
many of which are directly linked to drug trafficking.
A War on People
Globally, the "war on drugs" has not succeeded. Some estimate that
enforcing global prohibition costs at least $100 billion (€90.7 billion)
a year, but as many as 300 million people now use drugs
worldwide, contributing to a global illicit market with a turnover of
$330 billion a year, one of the largest commodity markets in the world.
Prohibition has had little impact on the supply of or demand for
drugs. When law enforcement succeeds in one area, drug production simply
moves to another region or country, drug trafficking moves to another
route and drug users switch to a different drug. Nor has prohibition
significantly reduced use. Studies have consistently failed to establish
the existence of a link between the harshness of a country's drug laws
and its levels of drug use. The widespread criminalisation and
punishment of people who use drugs, the overcrowded prisons, mean that
the war on drugs is, to a significant degree, a war on drug users a
war on people.
Africa is sadly an example of these problems. The West Africa
Commission on Drugs, which my foundation convened, reported last year
that the region has now become not only a major transit point between
producers in Latin America and consumers in Europe, but an area where
consumption is increasing. Drug money, and the criminality associated
with it, is fostering corruption and violence. The stability of
countries and the region as a whole is under threat.
I believe that
drugs have destroyed many lives, but wrong government policies have
destroyed many more. We all want to protect our families from the
potential harm of drugs. But if our children do develop a drug problem,
surely we will want them cared for as patients in need of treatment and
not branded as criminals.
Stop Stigmatizing and Start Helping
The tendency in many parts of the world to stigmatize and
incarcerate drug users has prevented many from seeking medical
treatment. In what other areas of public health do we criminalize
patients in need of help? Punitive measures have sent many people to
prison, where their drug use has worsened.
A criminal record for a young person for a minor drug offence can be a
far greater threat to their wellbeing than occasional drug use. The
original intent of drug policy, according to the UN Convention on
Narcotic Drugs, was to protect the "health and welfare of mankind." We
need to refocus international and national policy on this key objective.
This requires us to take four critical steps.
First, we must decriminalize personal drug use. The use of drugs is
harmful and reducing those harms is a task for the public health system,
not the courts. This must be coupled with the strengthening
of treatment services, especially in middle and low income countries.
Second, we need to accept that a drugfree world is an illusion. We
must focus instead on ensuring that drugs cause the least possible harm.
Harm reduction measures, such as needle exchange programs, can make a
real difference. Germany adopted such measures early on and the level of
HIV infections among injecting drug users is close to 5 percent,
compared to over 40 percent in some countries which resist this
pragmatic approach.
Third, we have to look at regulation and public education rather than
the total suppression of drugs, which we know will not work. The steps
taken successfully to reduce tobacco consumption (a very powerful and
damaging addiction) show what can be achieved. It is regulation and
education, not the threat of prison, which has cut the number of smokers
in many countries. Higher taxes, restrictions on sale and effective
anti-smoking campaigns have delivered the right results.
The legal sale of cannabis is a reality that started with California
legalizing the sale of cannabis for medical use in 1996. Since then, 22
US states and some European countries have followed suit. Others have
gone further still. A voter initiative which gained a majority at the
ballot box has caused Colorado to legalize the sale of cannabis for
recreational use. Last year, Colorado collected around $135 million in
taxes and license fees related to legal cannabis sales. Others have
taken less commercial routes. Users of Spain's cannabis social clubs can
grow and buy cannabis through small noncommercial organizations. And
Canada looks likely to become the first G7 country to regulate the
sale of cannabis next year.
Legal Regulation Protects Health
Initial trends show us that where cannabis has been legalized, there
has been no explosion in drug use or drug related crime. The size of
the black market has been reduced and thousands of young people have
been spared criminal records. But a regulated market is not a free
market. We need to carefully think through what needs regulating, and
what does not. While most cannabis use is occasional, moderate and not
associated with significant problems, it is nonetheless precisely
because of its potential risks that it needs to be regulated.
And therefore, the fourth and final step is to recognize that drugs
must be regulated precisely because they are risky. It is time to
acknowledge that drugs are infinitely more dangerous if they are left
solely in the hands of criminals who have no concerns about health and
safety. Legal regulation protects health. Consumers need to be aware of
what they are taking and have clear information on health risks and how
to minimize them. Governments need to be able to regulate vendors and
outlets according to how much harm a drug can cause. The most risky
drugs should never be available "over the counter" but only via medical
prescription for people registered as dependent users, as is
already happening in Switzerland.
Scientific evidence and our concern for health and human rights must
shape drug policy. This means making sure that fewer people die from
drug overdoses and that smalltime offenders do not end up in jail where
their drug problems get worse. It is time for a smarter, health-based
approach to drug policy. It is time for countries, such as Germany,
which have adopted better policies at home, to strongly advocate for
policy change abroad. The United Nations General Assembly special
session on the world drug problem would be a good place to start."
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