Pubdate: Wed, 10 Jun 1998 Source: Inter Press Service CONCERN OVER DRUG LEGALIZATION UNITED NATIONS, (June 9) IPS - The United States admits it is concerned -- but not alarmed -- by the growing new demand for the legalization of drugs in the country. "We are very disturbed by the trend," Gen. Barry McCaffrey, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, said and added that, if polling data was considered, there was "not a shred of support" for legalization. McCaffrey, however, dismissed as insignificant the increased support for legalization within the intellectual and academic communities. "It is a case of the mouse that roared," he told reporters here today. Since there was no widespread support for legalization, pro-drug elements in the U.S. are trying "subtle and nuanced approaches" to the question of drug legalization, he said. Donna Shalala, U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services, said there was a kind of "pseudo-intellectualism" in the current campaign to legalize drugs but "there is no scientific base to their conclusions." "These drugs are harmful, and there is now way that they can made the case that they are not harmful, or that they won't lead to the worst kind of public health effects," she said. Shalala said the U.S. government believed that public health issues ought to be based on science, and there was clear evidence that marijuana was dangerous. "Public policies that did not reflect the danger of drugs should not be made. There was no such thing as a soft drug," she added. U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno said she was totally opposed to the legalization of drugs "because I have seen so many instances in which people who were abusers were motivated into treatment by the threat of sanctions." "I think the balanced approach that includes vigorous enforcement and focus on traffickers and appropriate sanctions against users coupled with treatment can have a dramatic impact." All three U.S. officials are in New York for the U.N.'s three-day Special Session on the World Drug Problem. The meeting, attended by more than 30 world leaders, ends tomorrow. Ethan Nadelmann, of the New York-based Lindesmith Center, a drug research institute, said that President Bill Clinton has recommitted the United Nations and the United States to a drug war "that is more militarised and which will ultimately be more futile." "President Clinton should concede the obvious: After decades of relying on failed ideas like interdiction and training foreign armies, prices are down, drug use is up, more governments are corrupted and more ecosystems are in jeopardy. Increasing spending on failed policies of the past won't achieve a better result in the future," Nadelmann said. Last week, in a run-up to the Special Session, the New York Academy of Medicine hosted the first international conference on heroin maintenance. It was the first U.S. data presentation from a three-year Swiss study that prescribed heroin maintenance for more than 1,100 long-term addicts. The Swiss National Project on the Medically Controlled Prescription of Narcotics reported that participants in the study - in which addicts received heroin under medical supervision - experienced a 60 percent decrease in criminal offenses and a marked decline in the use of other illegal drugs. The Academy said that the Swiss trials have generated growing international attention. Similar trials are now underway or under consideration in the Netherlands, the UK, Australia, Germany, Spain, Austria and Canada. "Research and experiences with heroin maintenance abroad have important implications for the United States where heroin abuse is once again on the rise," the Academy said. The Academy also argues that medical prescription of narcotics is a widely accepted form of addiction treatment. Several narcotics are currently prescribed as one component of treatment for addiction to an illicit drug. According to the Academcy, morphine maintenance clinics operated in the U.S. from 1918 to 1923, and governments licensed opium outlets in Asia until the mid-1900s to provide restricted legal access to the same drugs that addicts previously obtained by other means. The British government reportedly allowed physicians to prescribe heroin, morphine and cocaine as a form of addiction treatment from the 1920s until the 1960s. At a press conference Monday, Pino Arlacchi, head of the U.N. Office for Drug Control and Crime Prevention, said that not a single member state had advocated legalization as a solution to the world's drug problem. "Drugs were very profitable, but it would be naive to think that the legalization of narcotic drugs and the subsequent removal of profits from such trade would put organized crime out of business," he said. On the other hand, Arlacchi said, there was currently a unanimous political commitment on the part of member states to devise new strategies for demand reduction, elimination of money laundering and the substantial reduction of illicit drugs. "The next step would be to discuss concretely how the resources should be gathered and used," he noted. Meanwhile, several non-governmental organization (NGOs), which have urged the United Nations to give up its global drug war, has accused the world body of shutting them out of the current discussions. "The United Nations kept off the program virtually all the citizen's groups and experts who wanted to speak," the New York Times said in an editorial today. "There is no discussion of some interesting new ideas such as harm reduction, which focuses on programs like needle exchanges and methodone that cut the damage drugs do." The Times said that like previous U.N. drug conferences, the current Special Session "seems designed primarily to recycle unrealistic pledges and celebrate dubious programs." - --- Checked-by: Melodi Cornett