Portugal's experience points to drug solution 
Political will needed but Tories going other way 
By Ethan Baron, The Province June 29, 2010 
It has become clear that arresting, prosecuting and jailing heroin and  crack addicts doesn't make them stop using drugs. The illegal drug trade  continues to fuel crime and gang violence, and the social and health  effects of addiction push the cost to $8.2 billion a year across Canada,  according to a 2007 report by the Health Officers Council of B.C. 
Until now, debate over the issue has tended toward the extremes:  legalize drugs or impose harsher penalties. Both solutions are  misguided, and the polarized controversy has obscured the middle ground,  where lie the best solutions. 
Two Vancouver-based organizations -- the B.C. Centre for Excellence in  HIV/AIDS and the International Centre for Science and Drug Policy  (ICSDP) -- have played a key role in drafting a declaration advocating  the worldwide decriminalization of drugs. 
The "Vienna Declaration" is the manifesto for next month's 2010  International AIDS Conference in Viennaa. University of B.C. associate  professor and ICSDP founder Evan Wood chaired the writing committee. 
"There is no evidence that increasing the ferocity of law enforcement  meaningfully reduces the prevalence of drug use," the declaration says. 
"Billions of tax dollars [are] wasted on a 'war on drugs' approach to drug control that does not achieve its stated objectives." 
Wood often refers to the results Portugal achieved by decriminalizing  all drugs -- including heroin and cocaine -- in 2001. And a 2009 Cato  Institute report on Portugal's experience shows that dealing with drug  use as a health and social issue, rather than as a crime, produces  surprising results. 
Before Portugal decriminalized drugs, opponents of the plan predicted vast increases 
in drug abuse and 
warned the country would attract hordes of drug tourists. 
"None of the nightmare scenarios . . . has occurred," says the Cato  report by Glenn Greenwald. "While drug addiction, usage, and associated  pathologies continue to skyrocket in many EU states, those problems --  in virtually every relevant category -- have been either contained or  measurably improved within Portugal since 2001." 
In Portugal, it's still against the law to possess or use illicit drugs.  Drug trafficking is still a criminal offence. What's changed is the  response when people are caught for using or possessing a 10-day supply  of drugs or less. 
There are no criminal charges, just a citation and a summons to a  three-member "dissuasion commission" composed of officials with  expertise in the law, health and social services. 
Commission members hear the circumstances of the person and their drug  offence and determine whether the person is an addict. Fines can be  issued or fines can be issued then waived, conditional upon the person  entering a treatment program. 
Public money saved by decriminalizing drugs has been diverted into drug treatment, the Cato report says. 
"Treatment programs -- both in terms of funding levels and the  willingness of the population to seek them -- have improved  substantially." 
As well, the number of addicts newly infected with HIV has dropped steadily since 2001. 
Here in B.C., the political will to create more addiction-treatment  space falls far behind the need and our drug-related costs -- financial  and human -- continue out of control. 
Decriminalization would free up millions of dollars for an expanded  treatment system and prevention programs. Unfortunately, the legal  changes are required at the federal level, where the Stephen Harper  government is going in the opposite direction. 
Source:
http://www.theprovince.com/news/Portugal+experience+points+drug+solution/3214518/story.html 
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