Pubdate: Mon, 31 May 2010 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Copyright: 2010 The Washington Post Company Contact: http://www.dallasnews.com/cgi-bin/lettertoed.cgi Website: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/117 Author: Marcela Sanchez Note: Marcela Sanchez is a Washington-based columnist NEW FIXES IN FAILED DRUG WAR Search for Alternatives Just Starting; Need Has Never Been Greater, Says Marcela Sanchez Costa Rican President Laura Chinchilla fulfilled a campaign promise on her first day in office May 8 and created a national anti-drug commission to combat drug trafficking and reduce the consumption of illegal substances in Costa Rica. The day before, Chilean President Sebastian Pinera flew over Santiago on board a spy plane that helped seize more than 300 kilograms of illicit drugs and disband two criminal organization involved in drug trafficking. For the casual reader, these events may seem like everyday drug war activity. But for Latin American observers, they underscore a disconcerting development, unimaginable just years ago: The region's model nations are now on the front line of the fight. Despite decades of the U.S.-financed war on drugs in the region, drug trafficking and drug use are on the rise throughout Latin America. According to a May 7 Gallup poll, 43 percent of Latin Americans say illicit drug trafficking or sales are taking place in their neighborhoods. The number of people reporting such activity has grown faster in Brazil, Chile and Argentina, countries not typically associated with drug production or cartels. If there is a silver lining to the failure of the long-used tactics, it is that alternative policies can finally be given serious consideration. The debate is no longer hamstrung by certain drug war presuppositions and prejudices, such as the notion that lenience is equivalent to capitulation. Reducing sentences and lowering reliance on incarceration, for example, are no longer considered taboo. A U.S. congressional hearing recently reviewed Hawaii's Opportunity Probation with Enforcement, or HOPE, a program that applies shorter and swifter jail sentences for drug users on probation. A one-year study found that HOPE probationers were 55 percent less likely to be arrested for a new crime and 72 percent less likely to use drugs than those on the traditional probation system. Likely reasons for the difference? Offenders under the traditional system never have sufficient incentive to quit, and the underlying causes of their substance abuse are never addressed. Like the HOPE program, President Barack Obama's new National Drug Control Strategy, also released in May, reveals a desire to address the pernicious "drug-crime cycle" by acknowledging that, unless the addiction is confronted, drug offenders will continue to pass in and out of the prison system. The strategy places new importance on public health solutions. "It is time for the public health and the health care system to be encouraged and supported in assuming a more central, integrated role in reducing drug use and its consequences through prevention," the strategy states, adding that "drug addiction is a disease with a biological basis." New approaches abroad also seek to distinguish between the drug user and the drug pusher. In Ecuador, for instance, a 2008 constitutional reform led to the release of hundreds of prisoners who had been sentenced for carrying less than 2 kilograms of drugs and who had served 10 percent of their sentence, or a minimum of one year. According to Maria Paula Romo, chair of the Justice Commission of the National Assembly of Ecuador, the rate of recidivism among those released has been 0.5 percent. If reduced criminal sanctions coupled with effective treatment succeed in reducing demand, it seems fair to suppose that the market for illegal drugs and thus the profits from drug trafficking will eventually shrink. The search for alternatives to the war on drugs is just beginning, and policy change in Washington will proceed incrementally. Still, with so many countries and people affected, the need for more successful strategies is greater than ever. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake