Pubdate: Sun, 29 Nov 1998 Source: Reuters Copyright: 1998 Reuters Limited. Author: Michael Shields SWISS VOTERS BLOCK BID TO LEGALIZE NARCOTICS ZURICH (Reuters) - Swiss voters Sunday rejected by a thumping three-to-one margin a sweeping proposal to legalize narcotics that backers said would eliminate the drugs mafia but critics said would make Switzerland a drugs haven. The plan would have made Switzerland the only country in the world where anyone aged 18 or older could buy narcotics of their choice, from marijuana to heroin, from state-run outlets or pharmacies after consulting a physician. With 22 of 26 cantons (states) reporting, the measure had not carried a single canton and had garnered the support of only 26.8 percent of votes counted so far. The proposal had been widely expected to fail, but the drubbing that voters administered at the polls disappointed organizers who were hoping a sizeable minority would support making liberal Swiss drugs policy even more tolerant. ``I am very disappointed. We had expected a much better result,'' said Francois Reusser, co-organizer of the committee that collected enough signatures to trigger the referendum under the Swiss system of direct democracy. ``We were unable to mobilize a wide range of (drugs) consumers themselves, the dope-smokers and ravers, or there would have been a different outcome,'' he told Reuters. He said he hoped government officials would still move to liberalize the possession and use of soft drugs like marijuana, adding he was ready to launch a fresh initiative if need be. ``We will keep the pressure on for this, of course,'' he said. Thomas Zeltner, director of the Federal Health Bureau in Berne, saw the vote as popular confirmation of Switzerland's policy of combating the drugs trade but helping the most severe drug addicts. But he said Berne was ready to take a fresh look at how to treat soft drugs like marijuana and hashish. ``We have to continue the discussion about the legalization of cannabis. There is now such a big gap between the legal regulation of cannabis and reality that we need to act,'' he said, adding draft legislation due next year would address this. The Swiss government and other opponents had called the initiative an extreme measure that would fuel addiction and isolate Switzerland from international police and justice cooperation. But backers said drugs prohibition had failed to stop the supply, instead creating a black market with no health standards and high prices that forced addicts into theft or prostitution to fund their habit. Launched by a committee of drugs experts, doctors and lawyers, the referendum proposal was backed by leftist politicians and youth chapters of two of three conservative parties in the Swiss government center-right coalition. Incomplete results from another referendum Sunday's ballot showed voters had approved spending 30.5 billion Swiss francs ($21.69 billion) to build a network of tunnels through the Alps. The project, which would ease rail traffic and help clinch passage of bilateral economic accords with the European Union, was passing by a nearly two-to-one margin with results in from 22 of 26 cantons. - --- Checked-by: Joel W. Johnson