Pubdate: Mon, 13 Apr 2009 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2009 Miami Herald Media Co. Contact: http://www.miamiherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: Sibylla Brodzinsky Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) COLOMBIAN PRESIDENT ALVARO URIBE'S PUSH TO BAN DRUGS UP FOR DISCUSSION President Alvaro Uribe Has Not Given Up On His Campaign To Get Personal Drug Use Outlawed. BOGOTA -- Sitting in the bedroom of her home in one of Bogota's well-heeled neighborhoods, Alicia Fajardo takes a deep toke of a marijuana joint and exhales the thick smoke. With that breath, Fajardo is exercising a right granted her by Colombia's Constitutional Court. But it's a right that President Alvaro Uribe believes is wrong. The Colombian Congress this month will begin discussing a bill introduced by the government that would prohibit possession of any drug and would punish addicts and drug users with mandatory clinical treatment. The bill would overturn a 1994 Constitutional Court sentence which ruled that prohibiting the use of drugs violated the right to "free development of personality" set forth in Colombia's constitution. Since then, adults can possess up to 20 grams of marijuana and one gram of cocaine for consumption in the privacy of their homes. DRUG-USE SURVEY The latest drug-use survey, conducted by the Uribe administration last year and released in February, showed 2.3 percent of Colombians admitted using marijuana at least once in the past year, while less than 1 percent admitted using cocaine in the last 12 months. In the United States, 5.8 percent used marijuana and 0.8 percent used cocaine, according to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health sponsored by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Fajardo, 46, says she is a regular marijuana user and does no one any harm with her habit. "Why should the government interfere in my private life?" she asks. Hundreds of defenders of personal drug use laws gathered in public squares of three cities, waving unlit joints in the air to reaffirm their right to possess a minimum dose. But for Uribe, outlawing drug use has become a crusade. Since he first began campaigning for president, Uribe vowed to outlaw possession of drugs but in more than six years as president he has failed to see the measure pass. He included the issue in a broad referendum in 2003, which was defeated. On four other occasions he has tried to push legislation through Congress outlawing possession, but all have failed. HYPOCRITICAL WAR Uribe says it is a contradiction for Colombia as the world's largest cocaine producer and exporter to claim to be waging a war on drugs -- funded with billions of dollars of U.S. aid -- while allowing domestic use. "It's not ethical to make that effort against production, against trafficking, against the criminals and simultaneously be permissive at the source, which is consumption," Uribe said in a recent speech. Fajardo says she appreciates the irony but says the internal market does not fuel the big-time drug cartels. "The biggest consumers are in the U.S. and Europe. What we get here are the leftovers," she says. Even Uribe's most loyal supporters disagree with him on the issue. COUNTRY DIVIDED "If [the government bill] is approved, Colombia will not be a country free of drugs. It will be a less free country," wrote Alfredo Rangel, a security analyst who usually supports Uribe's initiatives, in a recent column. Senator Armando Benedetti, as a member of Uribe's governing coalition, has opposed every one of the president's attempts to penalize drug use. "The state can't try to be a father, regulating the private lives of Colombians," he told The Miami Herald. But Benedetti says that despite previous failures to outlaw drug use, this time around Uribe may just get enough votes in the Congress, since the government has changed tack slightly. Rather than making possession a felony, under the government bill it would be a misdemeanor and offenders would face "therapeutic courts" comprised of judges, physicians and psychologists who would then hand down a sentence for treatment. "Drug users are not criminals; they are sick. The state will offer the possibility of rehabilitation," Interior Minister Fabio Valencia Cossio said on presenting the text of the bill. But Benedetti notes that experiences in other parts of the world have shown that forced treatment generally fails. "If they are going to force treatment on drug users, they would have to do the same for users of tobacco, alcohol and even chicharrones (pork rinds) because the fat content in them is a public health issue." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom