News (Media Awareness Project) - Mexico: US, Mexican Govs to Study Trafficking |
Title: | Mexico: US, Mexican Govs to Study Trafficking |
Published On: | 2001-06-09 |
Source: | Washington Post (DC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-25 17:27:05 |
US, MEXICAN GOVS TO STUDY TRAFFICKING
TAMPICO, Mexico
Governors from both sides of the Mexico-U.S. border have agreed to
study drug trafficking as a health issue and not a crime.
On Friday, the last day of the 19th annual Border Governors
Conference in the Gulf of Mexico port of Tampico, officials announced
they would form a commission of scholars from the 10 U.S. and Mexican
states along the border to study drug smuggling from a public health
perspective. Mexican governors proposed the idea, which was praised
by New Mexico Gov. Gary E. Johnson.
The conference includes California, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas in
the United States and Baja California, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo
Leon, Sonora and Tamaulipas in Mexico. California Gov. Gray Davis
dropped out at the last moment to deal with his state's energy crisis.
Johnson, a two-term Republican, has become one of the United States'
leading proponents of the legalization of drugs including marijuana,
cocaine and heroin. A former drug user himself, he believes drug use
is a health problem, not a crime, and is pushing for state
legislation to that effect.
He believes ending the prohibition on drugs would reduce violence,
corruption and many other problems in the border region.
Chihuahua Gov. Patricio Martinez said he would support legalization
of certain drugs to dilute the power of criminal groups that benefit
from the black market.
"This should be studied, analyzed and looked at to see what the
people want and what are the effects from a different perspective
that considers not only their prohibition but also in given time
their approval for medicinal purposes or for rehabilitation or for
other reasons," Martinez said. "We need to study all aspects of drug
use, especially marijuana."
TAMPICO, Mexico
Governors from both sides of the Mexico-U.S. border have agreed to
study drug trafficking as a health issue and not a crime.
On Friday, the last day of the 19th annual Border Governors
Conference in the Gulf of Mexico port of Tampico, officials announced
they would form a commission of scholars from the 10 U.S. and Mexican
states along the border to study drug smuggling from a public health
perspective. Mexican governors proposed the idea, which was praised
by New Mexico Gov. Gary E. Johnson.
The conference includes California, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas in
the United States and Baja California, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo
Leon, Sonora and Tamaulipas in Mexico. California Gov. Gray Davis
dropped out at the last moment to deal with his state's energy crisis.
Johnson, a two-term Republican, has become one of the United States'
leading proponents of the legalization of drugs including marijuana,
cocaine and heroin. A former drug user himself, he believes drug use
is a health problem, not a crime, and is pushing for state
legislation to that effect.
He believes ending the prohibition on drugs would reduce violence,
corruption and many other problems in the border region.
Chihuahua Gov. Patricio Martinez said he would support legalization
of certain drugs to dilute the power of criminal groups that benefit
from the black market.
"This should be studied, analyzed and looked at to see what the
people want and what are the effects from a different perspective
that considers not only their prohibition but also in given time
their approval for medicinal purposes or for rehabilitation or for
other reasons," Martinez said. "We need to study all aspects of drug
use, especially marijuana."
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