Pubdate: Sun, 18 Mar 2007 Source: Trinidad Express (Trinidad) Copyright: 2007 Trinidad Express Contact: http://www.trinidadexpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1093 Author: Emile Elias WE HAVE LOST THE WAR ON DRUGS We need a new strategy. It should be clear to everybody that the illegal drug trade is flourishing worldwide and is estimated by the United Nations to be worth US$400 billion a year. Enormous wealth is being generated by criminals who are willing to profit from the "risk premium" of dealing in these illicit drugs. Cocaine is produced in Colombia at a cost of an estimated US$500 per kilo, and retails on the streets of America at US$60,000 per kilo. Marijuana starts life even cheaper than Pangola grass, which is probably why it is called "weed"? In Afghanistan, the USA and its "coalition partners" have spent approximately US$2 billion trying to eradicate the growing of poppy from which heroin is made, and in spite of the presence of massive numbers of foreign troops, the heroin crop was last year estimated to be double the previous year's harvest - because there is a lot of money in it! That is why drug criminals are getting richer each year. So, why do we as a society continue to pursue strategies to solve a medical problem that simply makes criminals rich while diverting precious police and judicial time trying to solve a medical problem of addiction using quasi-military methods? In the United Kingdom, the British have been studying the problem over the last two years using a high level group of people including the police, academics, politicians, journalists and drugs workers. They have recommended that the police be removed from their lead role in fighting the illegal use of drugs. The report states that large amounts of money are being wasted on futile efforts to stop the supply of drugs. They recommend that we bring to an end the "criminal justice bias" of the current policy in favour of an approach that would treat addiction as a health and social problem, rather than simply calling it a crime. The Swiss have also reportedly tried a new approach by prescribing heroin to addicts, and this has enjoyed some notable success in reducing criminality among addicts who no longer need to fund their addiction by stealing. In the USA there is the recent case of a 41-year-old woman with scoliosis, a brain tumour, and chronic nausea, whose doctor says that using marijuana helps her. How on earth can she be deemed to be a criminal? How is she such a threat to society to the extent that she can be criminally charged and sent to prison? The case reached all the way to the US Supreme Court, which ruled against her! Can you believe this waste of resources to stop a sick woman from smoking weed! How is excessive use of tobacco or alcohol any different! What we need in Trinidad and Tobago and the wider Caribbean is to appoint an appropriate group of Wise People to study the problem, analyse the obvious failures, and devise new solutions rather than pursue the policies of "Prohibition" that were unsuccessfully tried in the US in the 1920s. Al Capone among others was a creature of those wrong strategies. Locally we have our own home-grown Capones by the dozen. There are distinct similarities between our wasted efforts of today and those of the USA 80 years ago. Demonising drugs that may be harmless when used in a limited way does not convince young people to steer clear of drugs. I call on the Minister of Social Development to shift his focus and come up with a proposal to his Cabinet colleagues to approve a study of this problem by a group of experts who can make the appropriate recommendations for solutions. Include the judiciary, the police and opposition supporters in the panel. Take the recommendations out of the political arena and into the medical and social development sector and come up with solutions that have a better chance to work than what we are doing today, that would include expanding education about drug use, taking the profit motive of the criminals out of the equation, and giving free drugs to registered addicts while treating their addiction medically and socially. Nothing could be worse than the present position. It's time to try something else as the British and Swiss are now doing. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek