Pubdate: Sun, 05 Mar 2006 Source: Jamaica Observer (Jamaica) Copyright: 2006 The Jamaica Observer Ltd, Contact: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1127 Author: Diane Abbott Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) DRUG TRADE WILL BE ONE OF PORTIA'S BIGGEST CHALLENGES The election of Portia Simpson Miller to the leadership of Jamaica has caused considerable euphoria. But, as the exhilaration wears off, one of the biggest problems facing her will be the drug trade and the crime that goes with it. One of the key drivers of the drug trade is demand. So it is worth looking at the history and pattern of drug use in America and here in Britain in order to relate it to the situation in the Caribbean. The recent International Narcotics Control Board report reveals the surprising fact that more people have tried cocaine in Britain than anywhere else in the world. Some 6.8 per cent of UK adults admit that they have tried it. And nearly two per cent of them use it regularly. Cocaine is the drug of choice for many middle-class professionals here in Britain and is now the second most popular drug after cannabis. Usage has doubled in the last seven years. Over the same period, the price on the streets of London has dropped. Cocaine used to cost about UKP 70 a gram. Now it sells for about UKP 35. This suggests that, despite well publicised drug seizures, the authorities have been decidedly ineffectual in stopping the flow of cocaine into the country. And the cocaine trade causes some of the biggest problems for law enforcement in Jamaica. This is largely because of Jamaica's position as a key hub in the shipment of cocaine from South America to the markets in North America and beyond. For centuries the drug trade has been tied up with colonialism and profiteering by western business interests. Hypocrisy has been a constant theme. On the one hand the British and American ruling classes have always condemned drug use and the countries that produce the raw materials. But they have always been perfectly happy to profit from narcotics and other drugs and turn a blind eye to their own citizens' drug use (just so long as those citizens were rich and powerful). This pattern first emerged in the 16th century when the Spaniards conquered the Incas of South America. The Incas were the first known users of cocaine. They had chewed the coca leaf (the raw material for cocaine) for thousands of years. It was officially reserved for Inca royalty, but it was widely used for medicinal and other purposes. When the Spanish conquistadors invaded South America they started out condemning cocaine (they called it "an evil agent of the devil") until they realised that the locals could not work without it. In their anxiety to mine gold and generally rape South America of its raw materials, the colonialists forgot their moral scruples about drugs and legalised the coca bush. Many settlers made a point of distributing the leaves three or four times a day to their (semi-slave) labourers in their work breaks. The settlers also imposed a special tax on local farmers, taking 10 per cent of their coca crop. Even the Catholic Church in South America grew it. The pattern set was to last until today; the West likes to moralise about drugs and profit from them at one and the same time. Closer to modern times, not many people know that cocaine was widely used in Europe in the Victorian era. It was the main ingredient in a number of tonics and patent medicines. One of the most well known was a tonic wine called Vin Mariani, which was first produced in 1863. Every ounce of it contained 11 per cent alcohol and 6.5 milligrams of cocaine. Not surprisingly, it was extremely popular. Famous Victorian writers like Emile Zola, Jules Verne, Alexandre Dumas, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, and Robert Louis Stephenson loved it. The Shah of Persia and US presidents William McKinley and Ulysses Grant drank it. And even Queen Victoria herself liked a tipple. The famous soft drink Coca Cola originally contained a small amount of cocaine per bottle. It keeps the name to this day; but in 1904 the manufacturers removed the actual cocaine. Cocaine remained fashionable in the 1920s and 1930s. Song writer Cole Porter was a user. But in the 1960s and 1970s cocaine was overtaken in popularity by LSD, amphetamine, ecstasy, acid, speed and heroin. But cocaine (and the derivative crack) became a market leader again in the late 1990s. Street sales in the United States topped US$35 billion in 2003. It was because the American market became saturated that the dealers turned to Europe. And today on the streets of my district in London, and many other inner-city areas, we struggle with drug-related criminality. The drug trade is a huge problem in Britain and America. But it is an even greater challenge to Jamaican politicians and the new prime minister, Portia Simpson Miller. In Britain, drugs are a threat to the health of the citizen. But in Jamaica, the narcotics trade is also a threat to the health of its democracy. So friends of Jamaica, wish the prime minister every success in standing up to the drug dons. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom