Pubdate: Sun, 23 Aug 2009 Source: Desert Sun, The (Palm Springs, CA) Copyright: 2009 The Associated Press Contact: http://local2.thedesertsun.com/mailer/opinionwrap.php Website: http://www.mydesert.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1112 Note: Does not accept LTEs from outside circulation area. Author: Marc Lacey, Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Mexico SOME FEEL AMBIVALENCE OVER NEW MEXICAN DRUG LAW TIJUANA, Mexico -- Yolanda Espinosa's eyes darted this way and that. Her hands trembled. For Espinosa, a cocaine and heroin addict in desperate need of a fix, a new Mexican law decriminalizing the possession of small quantities of drugs had a definite appeal. Advertisement "That's good," she said in her mile-a-minute speaking style. "Real good." But as someone fed up with her life in Tijuana's red-light district, where she and hundreds of other addicts live in flophouses and traipse through the streets in search of their next dose, Espinosa also had her doubts about what Mexico's politicians had done. "No one should live like I live," she said. "It's an awful life. You do anything to satisfy your urge. You sell your body. It ruins you. I hope this won't make more people live like this." Espinosa's ambivalence reflects her country's. Under siege by drug traffickers, Mexico took a bold and controversial step last week when it opted to no longer prosecute those carrying relatively small quantities of marijuana, cocaine, heroin and other drugs. Instead, people found with drugs for "personal and immediate use," according to the law, will be referred to free treatment programs where they will be considered patients, not criminals. The decriminalization effort, which many lawmakers endorsed with little enthusiasm, is intended to free up prison space for dangerous criminals and to better wean addicts away from drugs. It is not the only legislative proposal put forward that would probably never have been considered were the country not in the midst of a bloody and seemingly endless drug war. Capital punishment, which has not been carried out in Mexico for nearly 50 years, is now being offered by some lawmakers as an answer to the nation's ills. In April, Congress debated whether to make marijuana legal altogether, a measure President Felipe Calderon fiercely opposes. Under the new law, a police search that turns up a half-gram of cocaine, the equivalent of about four lines, will not bring any jail time. The same applies for 5 grams of marijuana (about four cigarettes), 50 milligrams of heroin, 40 milligrams of methamphetamine or 0.015 milligrams of LSD. "I could have all that and they wouldn't touch me?" Espinosa asked with surprise. She was hardly the only one who missed the government's announcement, which was intentionally low-key. Fearful that the law would be misconstrued, the government enacted it with little fanfare on Thursday. "This is not legalization," Bernardo Espino del Castillo of the attorney general's office told The Associated Press. "This is regulating the issue." The battle against the drug cartels, which has resulted in more than 11,000 deaths since Calderon took office in December 2006, will continue unabated, officials insist. Revising drug-possession laws, in fact, will help focus the drug war more effectively, they say. Besides taking the focus of law-enforcement officials off small-time users, the law allows the state police to arrest those with up to 1,000 times the personal consumption amounts, people who would be considered dealers. Anyone with larger amounts would be seen as trafficking drugs, and they would be handed over to federal authorities. "With this reform we will make the combined capability of enforcement against this crime a legal and operational reality," Attorney General Eduardo Medina-Mora told a conference of state prosecutors last week. Mexico's approach, which follows a similar decriminalization effort in Portugal in 2001, won praise from organizations that consider the jailing of users a waste of resources that does not reduce drug consumption. In the United States, some states have decriminalized the possession of small amounts of marijuana but not other drugs. "The decision by the Mexican government to decriminalize the consumption of small amounts of drugs constitutes a step in the right direction after decades of failed policy," said Juan Carlos Hidalgo, the Cato Institute's project coordinator for Latin America. "It is in line with efforts by other Latin American leaders and governments who are increasingly skeptical of Washington's prohibitionist drug policies." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake