Pubdate: Sun, 26 Dec 2010 Source: Bangkok Post (Thailand) Copyright: The Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd. 2010 Contact: http://www.bangkokpost.co.th/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/39 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/area/Thailand DEPLOY COMPASSION IN NEW DRUG WAR When the government recently announced its intention to embark on a new "war on drugs", it was answered by a loud chorus from many corners of society that there must not be a repeat of the 2003 campaign launched by Thaksin Shinawatra. That war on drugs has become notorious internationally for the more than 2,500 extrajudicial killings of suspected drug dealers and a total disregard for the rule of law. The present government has taken pains to assure the public that there will be no replay of that dark chapter in Thailand's history. Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban pledged: "This government will follow the law strictly in drug suppression operations." Sureeprapha Traives, secretary-general of the Office of the Narcotics Control Board, said the new campaign would not set targets for the arrest of drug dealers and users or the seizure of drugs. This is an important point, since it is believed that Thaksin's emphasis on numbers led some police to act without good information and then take the law into their own hands to prevent the truth from ever being known. The remarks from people at the top of the new drug offensive are encouraging, but constant monitoring of the situation by the press and human rights lawyers is needed, and so is a new emphasis on rehabilitation rather than punishment. Last week the initial skirmishes of the campaign yielded more than 1,000 suspects, rounded up in Bangkok and Pathum Thani. There do not appear to have been any extrajudicial measures taken in the large-scale police action. However, it is not known if the rule of law is being strictly upheld. According to the law, police need either court-approved search warrants or probable cause to search people or premises for drugs. Drug use has been a constant in nearly every society throughout history and it probably is not possible to stamp it out entirely. Arrest and detention are necessary weapons in the fight against drugs, but in order for society to claim meaningful victories we must move beyond the rule of law. It should be remembered that in most cases even drug dealers are deserving of compassion and another chance. Even people who take a very hard line on drugs must have felt pity as they read about the young Thai woman who was arrested as she went through customs at the Bali airport last Monday. She was promised 20,000 baht to swallow a number of plastic wraps containing 1,200 ecstasy pills and deliver them to a dealer in Bali. She was a drug trafficker, but she was a small fish. A big player would never have taken such a chance. The young woman alerted suspicion because of her panicky demeanour, in obvious physical discomfort and probably having just read the airport warning sign that says smuggling any amount of drugs into Indonesia is punishable by death. Life imprisonment is also a possibility for her. That's a very heavy price for a 24-year-old woman to pay for a decision she must bitterly regret. It is also a heavy price for her family. Hopefully the Indonesian courts will show mercy and the woman will be released after a much shorter time. It's a safe bet she would never again try to smuggle drugs into the country. In Thailand, too, the severest of penalties have often been used for relatively minor players. The architects of the new war on drugs say they are going after the big dealers and suppliers, which is as it should be. Judging from a media photo of one group of suspects apprehended last week, however, they are not all kingpins. Arrest and detention act as deterrents, but the best and most lasting deterrent for those already in the drug merry-go-round is rehabilitation. In Thailand this mostly means spending time in a boot camp-like environment. The exercise and discipline may work wonders in the short term, but after they get out most addicts need something more to stay off drugs. Government hospitals and health institutions should promote rehabilitation schemes modelled on 12-step programmes in which recovering alcoholics and drug addicts essentially help each other through adherence to a set of principles. These programmes have a remarkably high success rate. The best justification for taking down drug dealers is to protect young people from the misery and loss of potential that drugs often bring. It is important to remember that young people who become drug users and even small-time dealers also need protecting, and another chance. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake