UN Drug Report Favors Shift from Mass Arrests
June 29th, 2009 by Russ
The blogosphere is all atwitter after a first perusal of the UN’s World Drug Report 2009 (warning: PDF). Usually playing the role of a global cheerleader for interdiction and incarceration efforts, this year’s report strongly indicts lazy low-level incarceration policies that have done nothing but increase the world’s relative prison population.
Released by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, the report presents a highly wonky, statistics-driven approach to tracking drug production around the world, as well as assessing some of the more popular drug policies around the international sphere. One major conclusion of the report was that enforcement policies of blindly increasing arrests, incarcerations, and seizures is a dead end:
Resources that could have been focused on these individuals are often wasted on the opportunistic arrest and incarceration of large volumes of petty offenders. In the case of casual users, the sanction of imprisonment is excessive.
The report rightly notes that the addicts themselves are not the enemy in the War on Drugs, and that police and prison systems are ill-equipped to deal with them. It continues:
In the end, the criminal justice system is a very blunt instrument for dealing with drug markets. As necessary as the deterrent threat remains, the arrest, prosecution, and incarceration of individuals is an extremely slow, expensive, and labour intensive process.
Any shift in the UN’s position is surprising, given that World Drug Czar, Antonio Maria Costa, an old-world drug warrior, has been in office since 2002. This also explains why the report at no point attempts to make any real distinctions between the different types of drugs, and their relative levels of harm. Not a single thought is given to actually developing different policies based on what type of substance a country is dealing with. This is because, in the eyes of Costa, drugs are a scourge, and the question is never whether to control them, but simply how to control them most effectively. From such a myopic perspective, it’s very surprising to see any innovative suggestions at all.
The fun in all of this is watching the War on Drugs’ right wingers as they are violently dragged back towards the center by the ever-mounting evidence of a reality that doesn’t meet with their ancient world views.
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UN Drug Report Favors Shift from Mass Arrests
After an albeit limited perusal of the report, I wasn't getting such good vibes. The section I read was entitled "Why illicit drugs must remain illicit".
Apparently, we need to keep drugs illegal for the developing world, as so many people are taking up smoking and drinking there, that if illegal drugs were legalised, then unimaginable things will happen.
Think of the children.......
Apparently, we need to keep drugs illegal for the developing world, as so many people are taking up smoking and drinking there, that if illegal drugs were legalised, then unimaginable things will happen.
Think of the children.......
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As sad as it is, I agree with you. It's all about keeping the "little" people under control and not allowing them to choose for themselves what they put into or do with their own body. Especially Cannabis! One of the most non-toxic plants on this green earth. Politicians!Sir Niall of Essex-sire wrote:Tbh UN is never going to change its postion on drugs, it will never think legalisation is ever the answer...not in our life times anyway.
Cannabis is The Tree of Life
By George Monbiot. Published in the Guardian 30th June 2009
From George Monbiot's blog hereIt looked like the first drop of rain in the desert of drugs policy. Last week Antonio Maria Costa, executive director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, said what millions of liberal-minded people have been waiting to hear. “Law enforcement should shift its focus from drug users to drug traffickers … people who take drugs need medical help, not criminal retribution”(1). Drugs production should remain illegal, possession and use should be decriminalised. Guardian readers toasted him with bumpers of peppermint tea, and, perhaps, a celebratory spliff. I didn’t.
I believe that informed adults should be allowed to inflict whatever suffering they wish - on themselves. But we are not entitled to harm other people. I know people who drink fair trade tea and coffee, shop locally and take cocaine at parties. They are revolting hypocrites.
Every year cocaine causes some 20,000 deaths in Colombia(2) and displaces several hundred thousand people from their homes(3). Children are blown up by landmines; indigenous people are enslaved, villagers are tortured and killed, rainforests are razed(4). You’d cause less human suffering if instead of discreetly retiring to the toilet at a media drinks party you went into the street and mugged someone. But the counter-cultural association appears to insulate people from ethical questions. If commissioning murder, torture, slavery, civil war, corruption and deforestation is not a crime, what is?
I am talking about elective drug use, not addiction. I cannot find comparative figures for the United Kingdom, but in the US casual users of cocaine outnumber addicts by around 12 to one(5). I agree that addicts should be helped, not prosecuted. I would like to see a revival of the British programme that was killed by a tabloid witch-hunt in 1971: until then all heroin addicts were entitled to clean, legal supplies administered by doctors(6). Cocaine addicts should be offered residential detox. But, at the risk of alienating most of the readership of this newspaper, I maintain that while cocaine remains illegal, casual users should remain subject to criminal law. Decriminalisation of the products of crime expands the market for this criminal trade.
We have a choice of two consistent policies. The first is to sustain global prohibition, while helping addicts and prosecuting casual users. This means that the drugs trade will remain the preserve of criminal gangs. It will keep spreading crime and instability around the world, and ensure that narcotics are still cut with contaminants. As Nick Davies argued during his investigation of drugs policy for the Guardian, major seizures raise the price of drugs(7). Demand among addicts is inelastic, so higher prices mean that they must find more money to buy them. The more drugs the police capture and destroy, the more robberies and muggings addicts will commit.
The other possible policy is to legalise and regulate the global trade. This would undercut the criminal networks and guarantee unadulterated supplies to consumers. There might even be a market for certified fairtrade cocaine.
Mr Costa’s new report begins by rejecting this option. If it did otherwise, he would no longer be executive director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime. The report argues that “any reduction in the cost of drug control … will be offset by much higher expenditure on public health (due to the surge of drug consumption)”(8). It admits that tobacco and alcohol kill more people than illegal drugs, but claims that this is only because fewer illegal drugs are consumed(9). Strangely however, it fails to supply any evidence to support the claim that narcotics are dangerous. Nor does it distinguish between the effects of the drugs themselves and the effects of the adulteration and disease caused by their prohibition.
Why not? Perhaps because the evidence would torpedo the rest of the report. A couple of weeks ago, Ben Goldacre drew attention to the largest study on cocaine ever undertaken, completed by the World Health Organisation in 1995(10). I’ve just read it, and this is what it says. “Health problems from the use of legal substances, particularly alcohol and tobacco, are greater than health problems from cocaine use. Few experts describe cocaine as invariably harmful to health. Cocaine-related problems are widely perceived to be more common and more severe for intensive, high-dosage users and very rare and much less severe for occasional, low-dosage users … occasional cocaine use does not typically lead to severe or even minor physical or social problems”(11). This study was suppressed by the WHO after threats of an economic embargo by the Clinton government. Drugs policy in most nations is a matter of religion, not science.
The same goes for heroin. The biggest study of opiate use ever conducted (at Philadelphia general hospital) found that addicts suffered no physical harm, even though some of them had been taking heroin for 20 years(12). The devastating health effects of heroin use are caused by adulterants and the lifestyles of people forced to live outside the law. Like cocaine, heroin is addictive, but unlike cocaine the only consequence of its addiction appears to be … addiction.
Costa’s half-measure, in other words, gives us the worst of both worlds: more murder, more destruction, more muggings, more adulteration. Another way of putting it is this: you will, if Mr Costa’s proposal is adopted, be permitted without fear of prosecution to inject yourself with heroin cut with drain cleaner and brick dust, sold illegally and soaked in blood; but not with clean and legal supplies.
His report does raise one good argument, however. At present the Class A drugs trade is concentrated in the rich nations. If it were legalised, we could cope. The use of drugs is likely to rise, but governments could use the extra taxes to help people tackle addiction. But because the wholesale price would collapse with legalisation, these drugs would for the first time become widely available in poorer nations, which are easier for companies to exploit (as tobacco and alcohol firms have found) and which are less able to regulate, raise taxes or pick up the pieces. The widespread use of cocaine or heroin in the poor world could cause serious social problems: I’ve seen, for example, how a weaker drug – khat – seems to dominate life in Somali-speaking regions of Africa. “The universal ban on illicit drugs,” the UN argues, “provides a great deal of protection to developing countries”(13).
So Mr Costa’s office has produced a study comparing the global costs of prohibition with the global costs of legalisation, allowing us to see whether the current policy (murder, corruption, war, adulteration)
causes less misery than the alternative (widespread addiction in poorer nations)? The hell it has. Even to raise the possibility of such research would be to invite the testerics in Congress to shut off the UN’s funding. The drugs charity Transform has addressed this question, but only for the UK, where the results are clear-cut: prohibition is the worse option(14). As far as I can discover, no one has attempted a global study. Until that happens, Mr Costa’s opinions on this issue are worth as much as mine or anyone else’s: nothing at all.
References:
1. Antonio Maria Costa, 2009. Preface to the World Drug Report 2009. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. http://www.unodc.org/documents/wdr/WDR_ ... ng_web.pdf
2. Antony Barnett, 13th February 2005. Price of cocaine paid with blood. The Observer. http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2005/fe ... l.colombia
3. Rory Carroll, Sibylla Brodzinsky and Andrés Schipani, 9th March 2009. Spreading fear: how the new cartels deliver chaos to four continents. The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/ma ... de-bolivia
4. Editorial, 19th November 2008. This is our problem too. The Independent. http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/le ... 24513.html
5. Ian Sample, 24th October 2005. Health timebomb as rising cocaine use threatens heart problems in young. The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2005/ ... eandhealth
6. Nick Davies, 15th June 2001. Demonising druggies wins votes. That’s all that counts. The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2001 ... alsciences
7. Nick Davies, 23rd May 2003. National plan that only fuels the fire. The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2003/may/2 ... l.ukcrime1
8. Antonio Maria Costa, ibid.
9. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, 2009. World Drug Report 2009, p164. http://www.unodc.org/documents/wdr/WDR_ ... ng_web.pdf
10. Ben Goldacre, 13th June 2009. Cocaine study that got up the nose of the US. The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree ... aine-study
11. World Health Organization, 2005. Cocaine Project: Summary Papers. http://www.tdpf.org.uk/WHOleaked.pdf
12. Cited by Nick Davies, 14th June 2001. Make heroin legal. The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2001 ... alsciences
13. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, ibid, p165.
14. Transform Drug Policy Foundation, April 2009. A Comparison of the Cost-effectiveness of the Prohibition and Regulation of Drugs. http://www.tdpf.org.uk/Transform%20CBA% ... 0final.pdf