Will the Mexican president's call to revise the global policy on drugs lead to greater success in combating the scourge.
Inside Story Americas
Last Modified: 28 Sep 2012 10:03
Felipe Calderon, the outgoing Mexican president, has called for a transformation in international thinking on drug policy. In his final speech as president of the UN General Assembly, he said that developed countries like the US were not going enough to cut their drug consumption, so it was time to act. "… The United Nations has to lead a far-reaching international debate which would make it possible to take stock, on the one hand, of the progress and limits of the current prohibitionist approach, which has led to the results that we've achieved thus far. They must also carry out a study on the human violence, the unacceptable violence, that is produced by the production, distribution and trafficking of drugs in the world… and which has made, it is painful to say this, but it has made Latin American and the Caribbean the most region in the world…"
It is a remarkable turnaround for a man who, during his six-year presidency of Mexico, launched and presided over a war on drugs that killed an estimated 60,000 of his people. Those who have long called for a change in policy have applauded his bold call to action, while at the same time noting Calderon's emphatic plea to the UN was not actually mentioned in the official UN summary of his comments. Sanho Tree, the director of the Drug Policy Project at the Institute of Policy Studies, commenting on the omission, said: "It sounds like a lot of censorship because fully half of his speech was devoted towards criticising the international war on drugs and the conventional approaches that have been undertaken, and yet when your read the official summary on the website it's as though it's been scrubbed of any type of criticism. In fact it makes him sound like a cheerleader… it's actually quite offensive because future historians and journalists…will assume from the summary that there was really no criticism of the drug war." Tree said the UN was also "very defensive" about reopening discussions on amending three related conventions which, he says "keep the international drug war locked in place". Mexican drug traffickers largely control the illicit drug market in the US.
According to the US Department of Justice, Mexican drug gangs make about $39bn in profits a year, with $6.5bn from exports to the US alone. A World Health Organisation study shows the US is leading the world in drug abuse. According to a new study, marijuana is the most commonly abused drug in the US. It showed a drop in cocaine abuse but a rise in heroin abuse, with heroin users growing from 161,000 in 2007 to 281,000 in 2011. So what does this mean for the future of the war on drugs? To discuss this on Inside Story Americas with presenter Shihab Rattansi are guests: Bruce Fein, a former US associate deputy attorney-general; Sylvia Longmire, an analyst on the drug war; and Laura Carlsen, the director of the Americas Program at the Center for International Policy.
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Source:
Al Jazeera
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