Pubdate: Tuesday, June 09, 1998 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Contact: Website: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Author: Eugene Oscapella and Diane Riley Ottawa CALL OFF THE WAR ON DRUGS This week's United Nations summit on drug policy in New York is an appropriate occasion to reflect on the global war on drugs and on Canada's part in that war. Every decade, the UN adopts new international drug-control conventions, focused largely on criminalization and punishment, that prevent individual nations from devising local solutions to local drug problems. Every year, governments enact more punative and costly drug-control conventions and politicians endorse harsher drug-war strategies. The result? UN agencies estimate the annual revenue generated by the illegal drug industry at $400-billion (U.S.), roughly the equivalent of 8 per cent of total international trade. This industry has empowered organized criminals, corrupted governments, eroded internal security, stimulated violence and distorted economic markets. These are the consequences not of drug use as such, but of decades of futile prohibitionist policies. In Canada, prohibition has encouraged marketers to sell and users to use more potent forms of drugs or more dangerous methods of ingestion. Users have no guarantee of quality. As a result, some, especially the young and inexperienced, die; others are maimed. Our drug laws have turned thousands of otherwise law-abiding citizens into criminals and thrown many of them into prison for their involvement with drugs. Having sent them to jail, we deny them the means to prevent HIV infection from massive levels of drug use in prison. Until recently we refused to make condoms available to prisoners, in part for fear condoms would be used to hide drugs; better to preserve the moral fibre of our prisons than to protect peoples lives. Yet despite finally acknowledging that drug use in prisons is widespread, we have largely refused to help prisoners with needle exchanges or cleaning solutions to help prevent the further transmission of the AIDS virus. Canada's 1982 statement of principles, The Criminal Law in Canadian Society, said criminal law should be used only to deal with conduct for which other means of social control are inadequate or inappropriate. Nice words, but no reflection of reality. Instead, the criminal law has become the instrument of first resort in dealing with drugs. And still we have not stopped the flow of drugs into Canada, any more than the United States -- the most powerful nation on Earth, with some of the most repressive drug laws in the world -- has stopped the flow into the U.S. Endin prohibition makes common sense. Instead of propping up an enormously profitable black market in drugs, and pushing drug users to the margins of society, governments could focus on productive ways to control the harmful use of substances, be they alcohol, tobacco, marijuana, heroin or cocaine. They could turn away from soul-destroying prisons and toward understanding drug use as a natural, not deviant, part of human behavior. Too often those who call for open debate, rigorous analysis of current policies and serious consideration of alternatives are accused of "surrendering." But the true surrender is when fear and inertia combine to shut off debate, suppress critical analysis and dismiss all alternatives to current policies. Surely it is time to hold an open debate on global drug-control policies. Eugene Oscapella is a lawyer and Diane Riley is a policy analyst. Both work with the Canadian Foundation for Drug Policy, a non-profit organization founded in 1993 to seek humane and effective drug policies and a reduction in harm related drug use. - --- Checked-by: Melodi Cornett