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News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Editorial: Courageous Court, Obtuse Government
Title:Canada: Editorial: Courageous Court, Obtuse Government
Published On:2010-01-16
Source:Globe and Mail (Canada)
Fetched On:2010-01-25 23:25:35
COURAGEOUS COURT, OBTUSE GOVERNMENT

It was an act of judicial courage, not arrogance, for the British
Columbia Court of Appeal to set limits Friday on how the Canadian
government can fight against illegal drug use. Canada went too far in
holding the threat of criminal prosecution over those who work at or
use Insite, the clinic in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. It tried to
fight a so-called drug war on the backs of the most addicted
population in Canada. In doing so, it put their lives at risk.
Governments should not be able to bully and threaten the lives of the
most vulnerable people.

Judges have a moral duty, under the Canadian Constitution, to stand up
to such bullying. One of the men in whose name the constitutional
challenge was brought has been a heroin addict for 38 years. On
average, the users have been injecting drugs for 15 years. They aren't
doing it for recreation. They're ill. Even Ottawa acknowledges that
much. The argument that permitting them to do it under medical
supervision might encourage drug use is preposterous; Canada's best-
known medical clinic for addicts is a veritable marketing campaign for
the horrors of drug use.

Eighty per cent of Insite users have been incarcerated. Eighty-seven
per cent have been infected with Hepatitis C, and 17 per cent have
HIV. Nearly 60 per cent have had an overdose. Thirty-eight per cent
sell their bodies. Yet Ottawa would criminalize the health-care
service that could save and has saved lives. Of course it's a matter
that bears on constitutional rights.

Ottawa's arguments were obtuse in the extreme. Exempting these addicts
from the criminal law, it said in its written brief to the appeal
court, is like "requiring an exception from the law of theft for
kleptomaniacs," or "an exception from the impaired driving laws for
alcoholics." Huh? The addicts are finding a safe place, under medical
supervision, to inject drugs. The Vancouver police refer addicts to
it. Do the police ask kleptomaniacs to steal something? Do they give
alcoholics their car keys? The B.C. Attorney General supports Insite.
This is about an actual health facility, not an ivory-tower exercise
in abstract argument.

There is a parallel with medical marijuana. Courts have ruled that it
would be unreasonable and unfair to lay criminal charges against those
who use the illegal drug to alleviate the pain of cancer. It would be
wrong under the Constitution to criminalize very ill people who make
the choice to seek this relief from pain.

The war on drugs came to Canada, and it picked on a bunch of
desperately ill addicts. Some war. Boldly, B.C.'s highest court, and
before that a trial judge, have let Ottawa know that any war on drugs
fought in this country should not endanger the right of addicts to get
life-saving health care.
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