
News release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Wednesday 11th March 2009
Fear prevails at the UN as voices for drug law reform are smeared
Today Ministers from around the world are in Vienna for the High Level Meeting of the UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs to set a new ten-year UN drug strategy. Whilst fear and inertia has generally prevailed amongst our political leaders, we have also heard a huge range of serious voices calling for a debate on replacing drugs prohibition with legal regulation and control. At the same time a concerted effort has been made by Antonio Maria Costa the executive director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), to smear those calling for reform as “pro-drug”. The effect has been to stifle critics of the status quo, and make a rational and mature exploration of alternative approaches into a political no-go area, by inaccurately and offensively portraying advocates of change as ‘pro-drug’.
In a recent paper the head of the UNODC admitted that the drug control system had a "dramatic unintended consequence: a criminal market of staggering proportions". Costa added: "The crime and corruption associated with the drug trade are providing strong evidence to a vocal minority of pro-drug lobbyists to argue that the cure is worse than the disease, and that drug legalisation is the solution."
This was the latest in a series of similar comments over several years seemingly based on the absurd false binary that since Costa views his position as ‘anti-drug’ then anyone who disagrees with him must be ‘pro-drug’. However, de spite his attempts to malign those calling for debate, many have had the courage to call for reform.
So who should be included under Costa’s ‘pro-drug’ banner?
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In the run up to the last UN 10 year drug strategy meeting of this kind in 1998, Rowan Williams (now Arch-Bishop of Canterbury) and Prof.Colin Blakemore, former chief executive of the Medical Research Council, were amongst over 500 prominent academics, scientists, political and religious leaders, including a number of Nobel laureates and former presidents, who signed a letter stating that: "Persisting in our current policies will only result in more drug abuse, more empowerment of drug markets and criminals, and more disease and suffering. 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.”
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Adair Turner Chairman of the UK Financial Services Authority said: "And if we want to help sustainable economic development in the drug-ridden states such as Colombia and Afghanistan, we should almost certainly liberalise drugs use in our societies, combating abuse via education, not prohibition, rather than launching unwinnable 'wars on drugs' which simply criminalise whole societies."
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David Cameron MP (now leader of the Opposition), Tom Watson MP (now a Cabinet Office Minister), Bridget Prentice MP (now a minister in theMinistry of Justice)when on the Home Affairs Select Committee in 2003, signed up to a report saying: “We recommend that the Government initiates a discussion within the Commission on Narcotic Drugs of alternative ways—including the possibility of legalisation and regulation—to tackle the global drugs dilemma.”
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David Cameron MP alsosaid at that time: “[I]n Holland you can walk into a café and buy cannabis quite openly…I wonder why we should have such a concern if a country like Holland or elsewhere in the world wanted to go a bit further. It is virtually legal in Holland, but if they wanted to go a bit further, why should we be so concerned? We might learn something from a country taking a different and radical approach, and we could see whether it worked or whether it was a disaster.”
“I do not know whether it would be an unfair summary, but … the Government position on the two UN bodies seems to be that they are pretty hopeless talking shops that set very odd targets, that use extraordinary statistics, but we have to take part, we have to be there and try and have an input.”
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Recently, because of his concerns about drugs prohibition bankrolling paramilitary gangs (including the Real IRA) in Ireland Denis Bradley ( former vice-chair of the police board for The Police Service of Northern Ireland, and Co-Chair of the Consultative Group on the Past ) said: “It might be time to legalise drugs. It might be time to create outlets licensed and under government control, to supply drugs to those who are already addicted and to those who wish to dabble. It might be time to cut the gangs off at the knees by making them economically redundant.”
Danny Kushlick of Transform said: “ The last ten years has seen fear and inertia prevail amongst our political leaders, but it has also seen a huge range of serious voices calling for a debate on replacing drugs prohibition with legal regulation and control. All of these calls have been ignored, sidelined or suppressed, and Ministers look set to rubber-stamp another ten-year strategy indistinguishable from the last, with political posturing again winning out. ”
“A significant block to debate has been a very active campaign by the executive director of the UNODC to smear and caricature those calling for an exploration of alternatives to global prohibition as being “pro-drug”, in a way that is inaccurate and offensive to a large body of respected thinkers and commentators. Is Mr Costa labeling UK Ministers and the likes of Lord Adair Turner, David Cameron and Rowan Williams as pro-drug?”
Kushlick concluded: "We can bring peace and stability to producer and transit countries, and end much of the harm in consumer countries only by ending the war on drugs and replacing it with an effective, just and humane system of regulation and control. For that to happen, world leaders must stop using the UN to shut down any real debate on alternatives to war, and listen to the voices from across the political spectrum calling for change."
ENDS
Notes for editors
Editors Notes:
1. For full letter to Kofi Annan and signatories see: http://www.drugpolicy.org/global/ungass/letter/index.cfm
2. Adair Turner quote from speech to the World WWF http://www.wwf.org.uk/news/n_0000001032.asp
3. Quotes from members of the Home Affairs Select Committee from:
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200203/cmselect/cmhaff/559/3032006.htm
4. For the 26 peers who signed, and the full text of the letter to the Guardian 09/03/09 see http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/mar/09/war-on-drugs)
5. Denis Bradley quote from: http://www.irishnews.com/articles/540/606/2009/2/6/609499_371489030002Drugsdeba.html
6. For many more significant voices calling for drug law reform see:
http://www.tdpf.org.uk/MediaNews_Reform_supporters.htm
Contact
Danny Kushlick, Director: 07970 174747
Steve Rolles, Information Officer: 07980 213943
About Transform
Transform Drug Policy Foundation is a charitable thinktank that exists to reduce harm and promote sustainable health and wellbeing by bringing about a just, effective and humane system to regulate and control drugs at local, national and international levels.
Tel: +44 (0)117 941 5810 | Website: www.tdpf.org.uk | Blog: transform-drugs.blogspot.com
Transform Drug Policy Foundation, Easton Business Centre, Felix Rd, Bristol, BS5 0HE
Transform Drug Policy Foundation is a registered Charity no. 1100518 and Limited Company no. 4862177 |
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