Pubdate: Mon, 04 Jul 2005
Source: Times, The (UK)
Copyright: 2005 Times Newspapers Ltd
Contact:  http://www.the-times.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/454
Author: Ross Clark
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion)

HIT THE DRUG USERS. IT'S THAT SIMPLE

If the War on Narcotics Is Failing, Then Giving Up Isn't The Answer

IT DIDN'T need Lord Birt and his "blue skies" thinking to tell the 
Government that the war on drugs has failed miserably. In fact, 
anyone who tried to make out that it was being won would be seeing 
the sky rose-tinted, through their spectacles. As a report by the 
strategy unit at the Cabinet Office makes clear, the result of the 
global war against drugs so far has been a massive increase in drug 
consumption. I can quite believe Lord Birt's estimate that the cost 
of crime associated with heroin and crack use in Britain is UKP16 
billion a year.

It is becoming received wisdom that the only solution is 
legalisation. Lift prohibition, goes the argument, and the price of 
drugs will fall, putting the drug barons out of business. 
Occasionally a further argument is added: that making things illegal 
merely tempts people to do them and that if prohibition were to be 
lifted, drugs would lose their allure.

Around dinner-party tables in London, clouded in pungent 
reefer-smoke, it is no doubt an easy line of thought to sustain. It 
is less easy when not stoned. Were illegal drugs to be legalised, 
their supply and distribution would presumably fall into the hands of 
multinational companies, just like those who sell tobacco. True, 
tobacco executives don't gun each other down on the streets, but they 
are frequently accused, often by the same people who advocate 
liberalisation of drugs, of peddling death to impressionable young 
people, especially in the Third World. It is hard to imagine that 
many supporters of drug liberalisation would be pleased by the sight 
of Western executives touring China and Africa promoting crack cocaine.

As for the argument that prohibition gives allure to drugs, it is 
nonsense. Look at the relative numbers of people who drink and smoke, 
and those who take illegal drugs: there is no comparison. 
Legalisation of any illegal drug, be it cannabis, cocaine or heroin, 
would inevitably be accompanied by a huge rise in consumption as 
experimentation became much easier.

Much as I favour free-market solutions to many economic problems, 
this is one free market that we can well do without. Is there anyone 
who really fancies an increase in the squalor, violence and mental 
illness associated with drug taking, and to see more young lives 
ruined. To say that drug takers would no longer have to steal if hard 
drugs were legalised is foolish: it would still cost money to buy 
your fix of heroin, even if not quite as much. Given that heroin 
addicts tend to find it hard to earn money at all, you can be sure 
they would still end up stealing to maintain their habit.

As for the assertion that drug-dealing gangs would cease to fight 
each other were there no illegal drugs over which to fight, it is 
extremely naive. There will be plenty of other criminal openings for 
any drug dealers forced into a career change. The result of drug 
liberalisation could prove extremely hazardous to the public if, say, 
the drug dealers moved en masse into, say, carjacking.

The war against drugs is failing, but giving up on it is hardly the 
only option. There is, of course, the option of intensifying it. In 
spite of the fearsome resources deployed against coca growers in 
Colombia (which Lord Birt says has merely switched the industry to 
Bolivia), in some respects the war against drugs has been extremely 
feeble. When he was justifying war against the Taleban in 2001, Tony 
Blair made the astonishing claim that Britain was sending in the 
troops partly in order to suppress the heroin industry. In fact, it 
was the Taleban who had suppressed heroin growing, and us, after the 
war, who failed to tackle its resurgence.

But there is little point in engaging in a war against drugs if we 
are going to tackle only supply and do so little to fight demand. 
What effort is going into the punishment of users of illegal drugs? 
None at all. On the contrary, drug users are increasingly seen as 
victims, who have no power to resist what is pushed at them by evil 
dealers and should in no circumstances be saddled with a criminal record.

Ann Widdecombe, the former Shadow Home Secretary, was scorned for 
daring to suggest that anyone caught in possession of cannabis should 
be fined UKP100. I have never understood what was wrong with her 
suggestion. We prosecute those who buy stolen goods, not just those 
who steal them. We prosecute those who view child porn on the 
internet, not just the porn merchants. Why are we so feeble at 
prosecuting those who encourage drug dealers by buying their product? 
Admittedly, it would be counterproductive to sent drug users to 
prison when our jails are awash with drugs. But dope smokers forced 
to do community service with the mentally ill (many who gained their 
affliction by smoking dope), crack dealers forced to help victims of 
street crime? Why not?

The negative outcome of Prohibition of liquor in America in the 1920s 
should not blind us to the fact that a war against hard drugs has 
been fought once - and won. Parts of Britain in mid-Victorian times, 
most notably the Fens, were plagued by opium addicts. One chemist in 
Wisbech was found to have 40 gallons of laudanum in stock. Wisbech, 
not coincidentally, had a infant mortality rate worse than inner-city 
Liverpool. Yet between the 1870s and 1920s opium taking in Britain 
was almost entirely eradicated, through a combination of restriction 
of supply and suppression of demand.

If it can be done once, it can be done again. But it will take more 
than just a campaign against Yardies and South American farmers to 
succeed. Above all, we should stop treating drug takers as helpless 
victims, and instead make them responsible for their actions. The 
drugs problem lies as much with middle-class recreational users as it 
does with Third World farmers who grow illegal drugs and British 
gangs who trade in them. 
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