Pubdate: Sat, 14 Apr 2007 Source: Pawtucket Times (RI) Copyright: 2007 The Pawtucket Times Contact: http://www.pawtuckettimes.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1286 Author: Jim Baron Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?219 (Students for Sensible Drug Policy) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/afghanistan Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/columbia CHAFEE QUESTIONS EFFECTIVENESS OF GLOBAL DRUG LAWS PROVIDENCE - It might be time for America, and perhaps the rest of the world, to assess its drug laws to see if they are working, former Sen. Lincoln Chafee told a regional drug policy conference at Brown University Friday. With elected leaders of some South American nations talking about legitimizing the sale of their countries' coca crops and the cultivation of opium-producing poppies "exploding" in places like Afghanistan, generating money that is funneled to terrorism and prompting poppy growers to assemble their own private militias, Chafee said at the end of his presentation it may be time for a United Nations summit on the issue. "I think it is that big," he remarked. "We have to look at this creatively and it has to be done in unison with a lot of other countries," he told a half-full auditorium on the Brown campus, where he has been a visiting fellow at the Watson Institute for International Studies since shortly after losing his U.S. Senate seat to Democrat Sheldon Whitehouse last November. "We can't have different countries having different laws on the demand and supply side" of the narcotics trade. "It's got to be done in a global way. It has to be done through an organization such as the United Nations." As a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee subcommittee that dealt with international narcotics issues, Chafee made three tours of Columbia and other parts of South America and also visited the Middle East and Afghanistan, he told the Northeast Regional Conference of Students for a Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP) Friday. Is his call for a reassessment of current drug policies an indication that he thinks they are not working? Narcotics "is a big part of destabilizing the situation in Afghanistan and then in the Andean region and in Ecuador, with President (Rafael) Correa trying to get the United States to abandon a base used for drug interdiction, and I am sure there is evidence here. It could be debatable, I wasn't definitive that it is a failure but from my perspective, it's not working." With huge drug profits to fund political campaign, Chafee told the group, some coca growers are electing sympathetic leaders through the democratic process. The former senator said he was "stunned" when, during a meeting with then-President of Uruguay Jorge Batlle, Batlle suggested that he favored drug legalization. Nonetheless, Chafee said, "we can't go around saying we are in favor of promoting democracy around the world" and then tell a democratically-elected leader that the United States is not going to deal with them or give them foreign aid if they disagree with us on drug policy. "It's hypocritical." Chafee used the same word to describe the federal government here trumping the policies of states where voters or legislatures legalize medical marijuana or assisted suicide. "I always thought it was hypocritical for conservatives who railed for states rights except on certain issues (medical marijuana) being one," he said. Taking a question from the audience about Rhode Island's medical marijuana law and the governor's opposition to it, Chafee said, "for people who are very, very sick, anything we can do for them to ease their pain, we have to look positively on it. I disagree with the governor on that." On the domestic front, Chafee said in response to a reporter's question, "You've got to be open minded about it. You just have to step back and look at it clinically. Is it working, ultimately, is this working? And what are our options. We tried pouring money into it and putting the most onerous penalties possible. And now it is time for conservatives, liberals, everybody to step back from it and say, "Maybe we were wrong, we gave it our best effort, is it working." On the other hand, he said, "we just can't write off a population to drug abuse. We're not going to allow that to happen." Allowing decriminalization, regulating and taxing what are now illegal drugs, "makes it easier to use. That's not a good option, either." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin