News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada GE: Drug Laws Help Only Traffickers, Prominent Criminal Lawyer Says |
Title: | Canada GE: Drug Laws Help Only Traffickers, Prominent Criminal Lawyer Says |
Published On: | 1998-06-07 |
Source: | Ottawa Citizen (Canada) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-07 08:52:43 |
DRUG LAWS HELP ONLY TRAFFICKERS, PROMINENT CRIMINAL LAWYER SAYS:
SENATOR, FORMER OTTAWA MAYOR FEEL `JUST SAY NO,' JUST DOESN'T WORK
The only thing the world's war on drugs has managed to do is fatten the
wallets of a cunning group of drug traffickers, say prominent Canadians who
are now asking the United Nations to liberalize drug laws as a preferred
anti-narcotics strategy.
``We're spending a huge amount of money on some drugs by criminalizing them
and all we seem to be achieving is to create a group of very rich people,''
said Toronto lawyer Clayton Ruby. ``So let's stop and decriminalize some
drugs. Marijuana is the obvious one.''
Mr. Ruby is among more than 600 international signatories to a petition
that asks for the world's hard line on drugs to be softened. The petition
will be presented to the UN General Assembly when it convenes tomorrow for
a conference designed to discuss international drug policy.
At the conference, the UN is expected to approve another $4 billion in
spending on the global battle against illegal drugs such as cocaine, heroin
and marijuana.
Already, anti-drug forces around the world have spent billions on what is
regarded as a failure by an international list of dignitaries, authors,
academics and politicians. By the UN's own estimates, the additional
funding is just a drop in the bucket compared with the $400 billion U.S. a
year the illegal drug trade generates worldwide.
Former Ottawa mayor Marion Dewar says the ongoing international drug
strategy has been a disappointment and needs a serious overhaul.
``The Americans have spent billions on `Just Say No,' which doesn't work,''
she said. ``Our attitude (in Canada) is pretty much just the same thing.
We're going to make sure that nobody ever takes drugs and yet we're not
very good on the nicotine stuff, which is a very serious drug as far as
health is concerned.
``If we can open up the laws, get some international standards, then what
you start to do is get rid of all the black markets where the fortunes are
being made.''
Drug policy reform groups, which co-ordinated the lobby effort, say the
global war on drugs has actually compromised human rights and human health,
sent needless numbers of people to prisons and caused environmental
degradation.
``We're spending huge amounts of money with no return,'' Mr. Ruby said.
``(Prisons) don't successfully take out the hidden mafia. You don't
successfully take out the people who are really doing it well. What you
wind up getting is those who are at the bottom end who are inadequate and
sloppy and careless -- the ones who don't have the resources.''
Liberal Senator Sharon Carstairs, another signatory to the petition, agrees
the drug problem should be treated as a public health issue rather than a
criminal matter.
``In this country alone we spend millions of dollars on prosecuting people
for simple possession of marijuana, when I think that money would be far
more usefully spent trying to convince young people that drugs are not the
way they should be going,'' she said.
Meanwhile, a growing sector of Canada's population is being treated as if
they were criminals rather than the victims.
``If we could start treating our people who are addicts and recognizing
that it is a health issue, we'd be doing a lot more than incarcerating
them,'' Ms. Dewar added.
Despite the increasing momentum to change drug strategies to cope with
these realities, neither the public nor the politicians are entirely
convinced that liberalization is the way to go.
``It's going to take political will,'' Mrs. Carstairs said.
``Unfortunately, in my view, under the previous administration we joined in
the so-called war on drugs. We made certain commitments to the United
States, which I think has tied our hands.''
Former U.S. president Ronald Reagan was largely responsible for driving the
prohibition on drugs in the 1980s. Former prime minister Brian Mulroney
joined Mr. Reagan's crusade and, subsequently, Canadian political parties
have largely avoided the issue of decriminalization.
In 1996, Mrs. Carstairs chaired a Senate committee that examined a bill --
later passed -- that significantly expanded the reach of Canada's drug laws
and continues Canada's heavy reliance on criminal prohibition.
``We didn't feel at that time that we could amend the bill and
decriminalize the use of marijuana. But we did file a report in the Senate
at that time, which indicated that the majority of us believed that the
government should seriously consider the decriminalization of marijuana.''
Current leaders in both Canada and the U.S. -- having inherited a powerful
anti-drug sentiment -- have maintained the status quo.
``What's going to be very difficult for both of them is to change the
direction of that legacy,'' Mrs. Carstairs said.
International Signatories
Here are a selection of prominent world figures who have signed the
petition asking the UN to work toward liberalized drug laws
Adolfo Perez Esquivel, Nobel Laureate (Peace)
Argentina
Peter Baume, Former Cabinet Minister and Chancellor of the Australian
National University
Lidya Gueiler Tejada, Former President of Bolivia
Belisario Betancur, Former President of Columbia
Oscar Arias, Nobel Laureate (Peace) and Former President of Costa Rica
Erling Olsen, Former Minister of Justice, Denmark
Michele Barzach, Former Minister of Health, France
Sabine Leutheuser-Schnarrenberger, Former Justice Minister, Germany
Haim Cohn, Former Deputy President of the Israel Supreme Court
Monica Bettoni-Brandani,
Undersecretary of State for Health, Italy
Andreas van Agt, Former Prime Minister of the Netherlands
Violeta Barrios de Chamorro, Former President of Nicaragua
Nicolaus Bloembergen, Nobel Laureate, (Physics)
Walter Cronkite, Broadcaster, the United States
Joycelyn Elders, Former U.S. Surgeon General
Ahmet Ertegun, Chairman, Atlantic Records
Milton Friedman, Senior Research Fellow, Stanford University
Ira Glasser, Executive Director, The American Civil Liberties Union
Patrick Murphy, Former Police Commissioner of New York City
George Soros, Chairman, Soros Fund Management
Anita Roddick, Founder of the Body Shop
Edward Ellison, Retired Head of Scotland Yard Drug Squad
George Papandreou, Alternate Foriegn Minister of Greece
Jesus Silva Herzog, Former Mexican Ambassador to the United States
Stanley Crossick, Chairman of the European Policy Centre in Belgium
Willie Brown, mayor of San Francisco
Adrienne Germain, president of the International Women's Health Coalition
Simon Alberto Consalvi, Former Minister of Foreign Affairs for Venezuela
Allan Wagner, Former Minister of Foreign Affairs for Peru.
Martin Short, author, Britain
Checked-by: Richard Lake
SENATOR, FORMER OTTAWA MAYOR FEEL `JUST SAY NO,' JUST DOESN'T WORK
The only thing the world's war on drugs has managed to do is fatten the
wallets of a cunning group of drug traffickers, say prominent Canadians who
are now asking the United Nations to liberalize drug laws as a preferred
anti-narcotics strategy.
``We're spending a huge amount of money on some drugs by criminalizing them
and all we seem to be achieving is to create a group of very rich people,''
said Toronto lawyer Clayton Ruby. ``So let's stop and decriminalize some
drugs. Marijuana is the obvious one.''
Mr. Ruby is among more than 600 international signatories to a petition
that asks for the world's hard line on drugs to be softened. The petition
will be presented to the UN General Assembly when it convenes tomorrow for
a conference designed to discuss international drug policy.
At the conference, the UN is expected to approve another $4 billion in
spending on the global battle against illegal drugs such as cocaine, heroin
and marijuana.
Already, anti-drug forces around the world have spent billions on what is
regarded as a failure by an international list of dignitaries, authors,
academics and politicians. By the UN's own estimates, the additional
funding is just a drop in the bucket compared with the $400 billion U.S. a
year the illegal drug trade generates worldwide.
Former Ottawa mayor Marion Dewar says the ongoing international drug
strategy has been a disappointment and needs a serious overhaul.
``The Americans have spent billions on `Just Say No,' which doesn't work,''
she said. ``Our attitude (in Canada) is pretty much just the same thing.
We're going to make sure that nobody ever takes drugs and yet we're not
very good on the nicotine stuff, which is a very serious drug as far as
health is concerned.
``If we can open up the laws, get some international standards, then what
you start to do is get rid of all the black markets where the fortunes are
being made.''
Drug policy reform groups, which co-ordinated the lobby effort, say the
global war on drugs has actually compromised human rights and human health,
sent needless numbers of people to prisons and caused environmental
degradation.
``We're spending huge amounts of money with no return,'' Mr. Ruby said.
``(Prisons) don't successfully take out the hidden mafia. You don't
successfully take out the people who are really doing it well. What you
wind up getting is those who are at the bottom end who are inadequate and
sloppy and careless -- the ones who don't have the resources.''
Liberal Senator Sharon Carstairs, another signatory to the petition, agrees
the drug problem should be treated as a public health issue rather than a
criminal matter.
``In this country alone we spend millions of dollars on prosecuting people
for simple possession of marijuana, when I think that money would be far
more usefully spent trying to convince young people that drugs are not the
way they should be going,'' she said.
Meanwhile, a growing sector of Canada's population is being treated as if
they were criminals rather than the victims.
``If we could start treating our people who are addicts and recognizing
that it is a health issue, we'd be doing a lot more than incarcerating
them,'' Ms. Dewar added.
Despite the increasing momentum to change drug strategies to cope with
these realities, neither the public nor the politicians are entirely
convinced that liberalization is the way to go.
``It's going to take political will,'' Mrs. Carstairs said.
``Unfortunately, in my view, under the previous administration we joined in
the so-called war on drugs. We made certain commitments to the United
States, which I think has tied our hands.''
Former U.S. president Ronald Reagan was largely responsible for driving the
prohibition on drugs in the 1980s. Former prime minister Brian Mulroney
joined Mr. Reagan's crusade and, subsequently, Canadian political parties
have largely avoided the issue of decriminalization.
In 1996, Mrs. Carstairs chaired a Senate committee that examined a bill --
later passed -- that significantly expanded the reach of Canada's drug laws
and continues Canada's heavy reliance on criminal prohibition.
``We didn't feel at that time that we could amend the bill and
decriminalize the use of marijuana. But we did file a report in the Senate
at that time, which indicated that the majority of us believed that the
government should seriously consider the decriminalization of marijuana.''
Current leaders in both Canada and the U.S. -- having inherited a powerful
anti-drug sentiment -- have maintained the status quo.
``What's going to be very difficult for both of them is to change the
direction of that legacy,'' Mrs. Carstairs said.
International Signatories
Here are a selection of prominent world figures who have signed the
petition asking the UN to work toward liberalized drug laws
Adolfo Perez Esquivel, Nobel Laureate (Peace)
Argentina
Peter Baume, Former Cabinet Minister and Chancellor of the Australian
National University
Lidya Gueiler Tejada, Former President of Bolivia
Belisario Betancur, Former President of Columbia
Oscar Arias, Nobel Laureate (Peace) and Former President of Costa Rica
Erling Olsen, Former Minister of Justice, Denmark
Michele Barzach, Former Minister of Health, France
Sabine Leutheuser-Schnarrenberger, Former Justice Minister, Germany
Haim Cohn, Former Deputy President of the Israel Supreme Court
Monica Bettoni-Brandani,
Undersecretary of State for Health, Italy
Andreas van Agt, Former Prime Minister of the Netherlands
Violeta Barrios de Chamorro, Former President of Nicaragua
Nicolaus Bloembergen, Nobel Laureate, (Physics)
Walter Cronkite, Broadcaster, the United States
Joycelyn Elders, Former U.S. Surgeon General
Ahmet Ertegun, Chairman, Atlantic Records
Milton Friedman, Senior Research Fellow, Stanford University
Ira Glasser, Executive Director, The American Civil Liberties Union
Patrick Murphy, Former Police Commissioner of New York City
George Soros, Chairman, Soros Fund Management
Anita Roddick, Founder of the Body Shop
Edward Ellison, Retired Head of Scotland Yard Drug Squad
George Papandreou, Alternate Foriegn Minister of Greece
Jesus Silva Herzog, Former Mexican Ambassador to the United States
Stanley Crossick, Chairman of the European Policy Centre in Belgium
Willie Brown, mayor of San Francisco
Adrienne Germain, president of the International Women's Health Coalition
Simon Alberto Consalvi, Former Minister of Foreign Affairs for Venezuela
Allan Wagner, Former Minister of Foreign Affairs for Peru.
Martin Short, author, Britain
Checked-by: Richard Lake
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