Pubdate: Wed, 23 Oct 2002 Source: Daily Camera (CO) Copyright: 2002 The Daily Camera. Contact: http://www.thedailycamera.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/103 MEXICAN CHILDREN GET TESTED FOR DRUGS Program Begins In Mexico City Despite Some Opposition MEXICO CITY (AP)- A Mexico City middle school has started a pilot program to test students for drugs via urine samples, a move that has drawn mixed reactions, local media reported Tuesday. Proponents of the tests - a group of parents, a conservative local legislator and the school's administrators - said the program should be extended to schools throughout Mexico, where drug use is still below U.S. levels but is rising fast. Recent programs in which student's backpacks were searched for weapons and drugs were called ineffective and an invasion of privacy by critics and human rights leaders worried new drug testing programs would unfairly target poor and Indian children. "They are going into large schools to confirm what these oppressive associations already believe: If you're young and you're poor you're automatically a criminal," Enoe Uranga Munoz, president of Mexico's Human Rights Commission, said Tuesday. But drug testing got a strong endorsement from a surprising source Tuesday, when Mexico City's leftist mayor said he supported the program, which is opposed by many progressive groups. "It's justified," said Mayor Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador. "I support anything that would help fight drug addiction." The program started Monday with 93 tests administered to both male and female students at the government-run Middle School 282. The test require parental authorization, and 12 students who did not have that authorization were excused from the testing. The results of the tests were not made public, and it was not known whether any students failed the test. "Parents authorize these tests and are willing to sacrifice the rights of their children, in the belief that they are doing something to solve the (drug) problem," said Margarita Griesbach, of the Mexican Network for Children's Rights. "But in reality, this doesn't solve it." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom