Pubdate: Thu, 04 Jul 2013 Source: Jakarta Globe (Indonesia) Copyright: 2013 Jakarta Globe Contact: http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5226 Author: Farouk Arnaz POLICE TOO HARD ON USERS: JUDGE The mind-set of law enforcers needs to be changed to make them understand that not all drug users are criminals and that they need rehabilitation instead of imprisonment, says a Supreme Court judge. "Users aren't criminals, and the mind-set of law enforcers such as police and prosecutors needs to change," Justice Surya Jaya said at a discussion in Jakarta on Wednesday. "The process in handling drug abusers isn't implemented well, and that's why we're seeing so many of them jailed." Surya said the Supreme Court had already issued circulars urging judges to prioritize rehab instead of jail for offenders charged with nothing more serious than possession or consumption of token amounts of narcotics. "The 2009 Anti-Narcotics Law clearly states that those caught with possession of narcotics amounting to less than 5 grams should be categorized as users and not as dealers," Surya said. "But law enforcement officers have failed to implement this article." He added that judges should always refer to the 2009 law when issuing rulings against drug users, and try to determine whether the defendants were victims of drug abuse and therefore entitled to medical and social rehabilitation. "But the fact remains that judges can still be blamed for only ordering rehabilitation without a jail sentence. Maybe in the future we can change this by, for instance, ordering probation," said Surya, who is also a law professor at Hasanuddin University in Makassar, South Sulawesi. He also stressed the importance of focusing on the requirement for drug addicts to report periodically to the authorities, saying this was an important in keeping them in rehab programs. President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono last month called on law enforcers to make a distinction between drug users and drug dealers, saying the former should, where possible, be rehabilitated rather than jailed. He said the current law enforcement approach to tackling drug offenses was ineffective because it criminalized users who should be treated as victims. "Members of our young generation, who have become victims [of drug use], are losing their past and their present," he said on June 24, ahead of the International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking on June 26. "Don't let them lose their future as well. We must give them guidance. The solution [for drug users] is not jail, but rehabilitation. The concept shouldn't be one of punishment, but of salvation." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom