Pubdate: Mon, 01 May 2006 Source: New Mexican, The (Santa Fe, NM) Copyright: 2006 The Santa Fe New Mexican Contact: http://www.freenewmexican.com/emailforms/letters.php Website: http://www.freenewmexican.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/695 Author: Alicia A. Caldwell, Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) DRUG BILL WORRIES MEXICAN POLICE, TOURISM OPERATORS CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (AP) - Police and business owners from Mexico's beaches to border cities worried Sunday that a measure passed to decriminalize possession of cocaine, heroin and other drugs could attract droves of tourists solely looking to get high. Mexican and U.S. government officials insist the full text of the law eliminates legal hurdles to prosecuting drug crimes large and small. But it also lays out specific amounts of all kinds of drugs _ including marijuana and ecstasy _ that can be possessed for personal use. President Vicente Fox has yet to sign the bill, but his office praised it shortly after it was passed by Congress in a late-night session Friday. In Juarez, which borders El Paso, Texas, the banner newspaper headlines trumpeted word of the plan Sunday. Raul Martinez, a 58-year-old waiter at the popular border-area bar the Kentucky Club, said he was concerned about the potential impact on U.S. teens _ who already swarm this city's bars and clubs looking for cheap drinks. "I worry for the kids of Texas, the kids of Juarez, I worry for all the kids," Martinez said. His greatest fear, he said, would be the temptation to try hard-core drugs: "If the United States made little bits (of drugs) legal, I would feel the same." While it's unclear how the proposed law would work, Mexican police could still apparently detain people for consuming or carrying small amounts of drugs in public, but the only punishment would be a referral for treatment or inclusion on a registry of "addicts." "On one side, they're asking us to fight it," Jose Valencia, a police officer in Mexico City's tourist-friendly Zona Rosa district said of drug use. "On the other, we have to allow consumption." Mexican law already left open the possibility of dropping charges against people caught with drugs if they are considered addicts and if "the amount is the quantity necessary for personal use." The new bill drops the "addict" requirement _ automatically allowing any "consumers" to have drugs _ and sets out specific allowable quantities. Mexico City-based security analyst and former Pentagon official Ana Maria Salazar said the law would make it easier to convict street corner drug pushers because it sets limits for personal possession, thereby taking discretion on whether to press charges out of the hands of judges and prosecutors who often take bribes. "All of those who think this legalizes drugs in Mexico, not only are they wrong but they are going to get in a lot of trouble if they come here and try to use drugs," Salazar said. "It's designed to go after the smaller groups of drug smugglers." In Washington, the State Department has taken a similar view. Mexican lawmakers who voted in favor of the bill say it also will keep small-time addicts out of prison and allow police to focus on busting top drug lords. Few places have been more devastated by drug violence than another border city, Nuevo Laredo, across the Rio Grande from Laredo, Texas. There, anti-drug agents say a pair of rival drug gangs battling for control of lucrative smuggling corridors into U.S. territory have been waging a bloody war for control since early 2004. Higinio Ibarra, head of a business organization in downtown Nuevo Laredo, said the measure might entice U.S. tourists to cross in Mexico, but "they won't be the best kind of tourists." So far this year, eight police officers have been shot dead in drug-related slayings in Nuevo Laredo. "Here things are very tense and many of our compatriots have died," said a police officer who asked only to be identified as Jose. "What will happen if we have to concede them the right to use drugs?" Shining shoes for tourists, Elipio Rodiriguez said drugs were already everywhere in Nuevo Laredo. "There by the bridge (to the U.S.) anyone can do drugs," he said. "Police always patrol there, by those who are selling, and nothing ever happens. Do you think something will change now?" But others were more open to the possibility of decriminalization. Reitse Beek, a 22-year-old Dutch student, said he and several friends had to drive around on a recent trip to Chetumal on the Yucatan peninsula so they could smoke hashish. He said legalization of marijuana was a good idea because it accommodates travelers who smoke it but are forced to take extreme precautions to avoid getting caught by police who demand bribes. In Caribbean resort of Cancun, Roberto Collado, a tourist from Puerto Rico, said of Mexico's Congress: "I hope they don't come to regret what they've done." "A lot of criminal problems are caused by these kinds of drugs," Collado said. But Jesus Almaguer, president of Cancun's Hotel Association, said "those who consume drugs and visit our city already know how to obtain them." "Mexico will not become a drug destination," he said. Bruce Smith, a Canadian tourist visiting the ruins of an Aztec temple in Mexico City's historic downtown, said the country's decision to decriminalize drugs is worth a try. "It's far enough away from Canada so we'll have an experiment," said Smith, 62. "If it's a disaster, we won't do it. If it works, fine." ___ Associated Press reporters Jorge Vargas in Nuevo Laredo, Jorge Dominguez in Cancun, and Alan Clendenning and Will Weissert in Mexico City contributed to this report. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom