Pubdate: Thu, 23 May 2013
Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Copyright: 2013 The Vancouver Sun
Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html
Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477
Author: Peter O'Neil
Cited: Canadian Drug Policy Coalition: http://drugpolicy.ca/
Referenced: http://drugpolicy.ca/report/CDPC2013_en.pdf
Page: 5

DECRIMINALIZE MORE THAN JUST POT, EXPERTS URGE

OTTAWA - The personal use of illegal drugs, including heroin and crack
cocaine, should be decriminalized as part of a federal-provincial
strategy to tackle drug abuse, a B.C.-based national coalition of drug
policy experts argue.

In a report to be released Thursday, the coalition denounces the
Harper government's aggressive war on drugs, which puts the emphasis
on law enforcement while steering money away from harm-reduction
initiatives like Vancouver's supervised injection site.

"While countries all around the world are adopting forward-thinking,
evidence-based drug policies, Canada is taking a step backwards and
strengthening punitive policies that have been proven to fail," states
a summary of the 112-page report from the Canadian Drug Policy
Coalition, which is based at Simon Fraser University's Centre for
Applied Research in Mental Health and Addiction.

The "stunning display of unimaginative thinking" has failed to
decrease the flow of drugs into Canada while hampering efforts to deal
with drug-related health problems.

"Despite Canada's significant investment in drug control efforts,
drugs are cheaper and more available than ever," the report notes.

Among the recommendations is a call to legalize, regulate and tax the
sale of marijuana to adults, taking advantage of an underground
business that generates an estimated $357 million in annual sales in
B.C. alone, according to the authors.

By far the most controversial recommendation calls for the end to
prohibition of not only "soft" drugs like marijuana, but products like
heroin, cocaine and methamphetamines.

The report notes that at least 25 jurisdictions in the world have
moved to decriminalize at least some drugs, with Portugal (in 2001)
and the Czech Republic (in 2010) ending criminal bans for all drugs.

"After decriminalization and similar to Portugal, drug use (among
Czechs) has not increased significantly but the social harms of drug
use have declined," the report stated.

"In Portugal, decriminalization has had the effect of decreasing the
numbers of people injecting drugs, decreasing the number of people
using drugs problematically, and decreasing trends of drug use among
15 to 24 year  olds."

The coalition lists as its "partners" more than 70 organizations,
including the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, the Central
Alberta AIDS Network Society, the Canadian Cancer Survivor Network,
and the Canadian Association of Nurses in AIDS Care.

Its report is harshly critical of the federal government's anti-drug
and tough-on-crime policies introduced since Stephen Harper became
prime minister in 2006, including minimum mandatory sentences for
certain drug offences.

Among the targets is the five-year National Anti-Drug Strategy, which
was renewed for another five years in 2012 at a cost of $528 million.
The program devotes most of its money (roughly 70 per cent) to law
enforcement, according to the report.

It also goes after the Canadian Forces' substantial investment in
counter-narcotics missions in the Caribbean Sea and the eastern
Pacific, involving warships and aircraft operating with U.S. forces.

It complains about the lack of support of, and in the case of the
Vancouver supervised injection site aggressive opposition to,
"harm-reduction" programs like needle exchanges that "save lives and
protect everyone's health," according to the Newfoundland AIDS Committee.

The Harper government has never flinched from its strong support for
get-tough measures against drug offences, often sneering at academic
studies suggesting that its measures, while popular among many
Conservative party supporters, had debatable or even counterproductive
results.

In 2007, for instance, then-health minister Tony Clement declared that
the "party's over" while speaking of his party's contempt for the
former Liberal government's approach to illicit drug use.

The coalition report cites 2011 Health Canada statistics indicating
that B.C. has the highest percentage of people who have used marijuana
at least once in their lives, with the B.C. rate of 44.3 per cent well
above the national average of 39.4 per cent.

Health Canada said 12.1 per cent of British Columbians said they
smoked pot over the past year, second to Nova Scotia's 12.4 per cent
and well above the national average of 9.1 per cent.
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MAP posted-by: Matt