Pubdate: Fri, 25 Jun 2010 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2010 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/O3vnWIvC Website: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Author: Chris Selley POWER TO THE DRUG LORDS Jamaican gangster and drug kingpin Christopher "Dudus" Coke, subject of a violent month-long manhunt in the slums of West Kingston, surrendered to authorities on Wednesday without a shot being fired. He happened to be dressed as a woman at the time, police gleefully announced, providing photo evidence -- a darkly comic anticlimax to a senseless battle that killed 73 people and wounded 35 more. It's no exaggeration to say that drug consumers in the world's leading nations have blood on their hands. Their presidents and prime ministers have more. The U.S. indictment against Coke--who may or may not be immediately extradited -- makes fascinatingly grim reading. I was especially struck by this passage: "In addition to providing Coke with a portion of the proceeds from their drug trafficking activities ... members of [his] Organization in the United States supply Coke with firearms in exchange for the assistance that Coke provides, and in recognition of his status and power within the Organization. "Organization members purchase firearms in the United States and ship those firearms to Jamaica. Once those firearms arrive in Jamaica, Coke decides how and to whom they will be distributed. Coke's access to firearms, as well as cash, serves to support and increase his authority and power in Kingston, Jamaica and elsewhere." So, that's a pretty rotten deal for Jamaica. The sale of illegal drugs in the United States enriches a few criminals in Jamaica, arms them to the teeth with illegal American guns and effectively cedes to them control of entire chunks of the nation's capital, thus delegitimizing the government even as individual politicians fight, with varying degrees of conviction, the temptation to partake of lucrative corruption. Law-abiding Jamaicans, meanwhile, are caught in the crossfire. What to do? Over the past month, newspaper editorial boards, politicians and talking heads have lined up to espouse the same solution: Provide more support for Jamaica's forces in the global war on drugs. Which is absurd. The island is, famously, a significant source of marijuana. But the cocoa leaf doesn't even grow there; Jamaica is just a transshipment point for cargo from Bolivia, Colombia and Peru. So let's say the Jamaican police and military somehow did manage to eradicate the drug trade. Would the extraterritorial cartels and gangsters simply throw up their hands in defeat, perhaps enrolling in trade schools or opening restaurants? Of course not. Any country -- Cuba, Haiti, Guatemala, anywhere -- could be next in line to service what Hillary Clinton once called America's "insatiable demand" for drugs, at the modest cost of the destruction of its society and thousands of dead citizens. It cannot be repeated enough that 23,000 Mexicans have died in President Felipe Calderon's drug war-- in three-and-a-half years. In many ways, illegal drugs are like blood diamonds. If no one wanted to buy them, an awful lot of suffering would be alleviated around the world. But people do want to buy them, and they always will. It's completely unethical for political leaders in developed countries to continue to ignore the very real power they have to improve the situation -- by liberalizing drug laws and thereby weakening criminal elements both at home and abroad. I'd be willing to support outright legalization of all drugs simply because the current approach has been such an unmitigated, disastrous failure. But there's a lot of room between outright legalization and the status quo. As a first step, we could decriminalize marijuana, as Jean Chretien pretended to want to do and as several American states have actually done. Instead, the Canadian government proposes to enact a mandatory six-month minimum sentence for possession of as few as six marijuana plants. Think about that. If Canadians are going to smoke pot anyway - -- and they are -- it is indisputably better that they grow it themselves on their own windowsills or in small-scale hydroponic operations, or purchase it from friends who do so, as opposed to buying it from a criminal dealer. Yet the tough-on-crime gang in Ottawa seems utterly determined to entrench marijuana production as strictly a criminal enterprise. Ask the leader of the official opposition about it and he'll tell you he doesn't want you "parking your life on the end of a marijuana cigarette." It's indefensible. If they don't want to indulge Canadian pot-smokers, perhaps they could indulge the Jamaicans who spent the last month dodging gunfire on their way to work and school. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D