Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Pubdate: June 8, 1998 Author: R.A. Dyer WAR ON DRUGS CALLED A WASTE Activists say the effort is only causing crime and corruption By R.A. DYER Copyright 1998 Houston Chronicle Activists in Houston called Monday for an end to the war on drugs -- even as President Clinton was advocating a global strategy to fight illegal narcotics during his address to a special session of the United Nations. "We can teach our children personal responsibility and protect them from drugs, but we cannot protect them from the crime, violence and corruption of the black market, or from the abuse of power . . . that occur in the futile fight against that market," Jerry Epstein, the Drug Policy Forum of Texas president, said Monday. Speaking at a news conference to coincide with the United Nations' special session on drugs, which continues through Wednesday, about a dozen activists joined Epstein in expressing opposition to the drug war. The activists represented organizations -- including the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas and the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws -- that gathered outside the Houston Drug Enforcement Administration office with picket signs. Some present favored the decriminalization of narcotics, saying drugs that now are illegal should instead be regulated and taxed. Others called for a reduction in the length of drug sentences. But all agreed that existing law enforcement efforts generally are counter-productive. G. Alan Robison, Drug Policy Forum of Texas founder, said most politicians, fearful of appearing to be soft on drugs, won't discuss alternatives to law enforcement. "Our policies are misguided," said Robison, a professor of pharmacology at the University of Texas Health Science Center. "We should stop putting people in prison for using drugs -- that doesn't work. . . . Ignorance, fear and greed are the three things driving the drug war. There's vested interests that want to keep this thing going." During the U.N. General Assembly special session on Monday, Clinton called for a global strategy to fight illegal drugs and for an end to the debate over whether consuming or producing countries were more responsible for the international drug problem. The special session prompted a letter-signing campaign by the Lindesmith Center, a Washington-based think tank opposed to drug control policy in the United States. In an open message to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan that appears to have been signed by hundreds of global leaders and Nobel Prize laureates, the Lindesmith Center claimed that "the global war on drugs is now causing more harm that drug abuse itself." "In many parts of the world, drug war politics impede public health efforts to stem the spread of HIV, hepatitis and other infectious diseases," states the letter, which bears the signatures of former broadcast journalist Walter Cronkite, former California Sen. Alan Cranston and San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown. "Human rights are violated, environmental assaults perpetrated and prisons inundated with hundreds of thousands of drug law violators. Scarce resources better expended on health, education and economic development are squandered on ever more expensive interdiction efforts. Realistic efforts to reduce drug-related crime, disease and death are abandoned in favor of rhetorical proposals to create drug-free societies." - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski