News (Media Awareness Project) - Australia: Column: Time to Start Thinking Again on Drug Laws |
Title: | Australia: Column: Time to Start Thinking Again on Drug Laws |
Published On: | 2010-09-06 |
Source: | Age, The (Australia) |
Fetched On: | 2010-09-07 03:01:00 |
TIME TO START THINKING AGAIN ON DRUG LAWS
Huge Profits Ensure That New Traffickers Are Always Ready to Fill Any Gaps.
THE report by The Age and Four Corners on a major drugs bust
(code-named Operation Hoffman) by state police forces under the
direction of the Australian Crime Commission was a cracking story. A
fascinating cast of goodies and baddies was set against the
background of a global drugs distribution chain, which was broken by
following the money trail.
The conclusion was that even with regular disruptions to the supply
chain and the operators being given heavy jail sentences, the
extremely high profits are more than enough to ensure that new drug
rings will step into the breach.
If interruptions to supply chains were working, we would see low
availability of drugs and high prices leading to reduced consumption.
Evidence from overseas - where the policy emphasis is on cutting
supplies - shows that drugs are in fact more readily available,
prices have fallen dramatically, the purity of hard drugs is
increasing and the market is growing.
But the conclusion drawn by the crime commission from Operation
Hoffman is that it needs more resources to follow the international
money trail.
The 2008-09 Illicit Drug Data Report ramps up the rhetoric. The drugs
of choice for today's young are amphetamines and ecstasy. The report
states that amphetamines, even in small doses, can cause
cardiovascular problems and convulsions leading to death. Long-term
use can trigger violent behaviour, and structural and functional
changes to the brain, leading to psychosis.
According to the commission, ecstasy (in high doses) can result in
liver, kidney or cardiovascular system failure and death. Long-term
use can cause paranoia, insomnia, nausea, hypothermia and severe
hallucinations, and can damage cognitive and memory functions.
I am sure that this is true, but it should be kept in proportion. The
damage done to individuals and the harm caused to society by these
drugs (even the most lethal illicit drugs, such as heroin) is small
compared with the harm done by legal drugs such as alcohol and tobacco.
According to a 2003 study undertaken for the British cabinet, and
later published by The Guardian, heroin and/or crack users were
responsible for the vast majority of the cost of drug-motivated
crime, that ecstasy was unlikely to cause significant health damage,
and that amphetamines had medium health risks.
Heavy use of amphetamines or ecstasy could affect users' ability to
work and to care for others, but was unlikely to motivate crime.
Attempts at supply intervention should be concentrated on "hard"
drugs, because heroin and/or crack users are the "high harm-causing users".
But as the British report said, even if supply interventions did
successfully increase the price, the evidence was not sufficiently
strong to prove that this would reduce harm. While shortages might
drive some users to get treatment for their addiction, it might also
induce some users to undertake more criminal activity to satisfy
their addiction.
Let's put this into a historical context. Up until 1906, it was legal
to import edible opium into Australia.
In a speech to the Lowy Institute, Alex Wodak, the director of
alcohol and drug services at Sydney's St Vincent's hospital, quoted
the 1908 annual report to the Commonwealth Parliament by the
comptroller-general of customs, which said: "It is very doubtful if
such prohibition has lessened to an extent the amount which is
brought into Australia ...
"Owing to total prohibition, the price of opium has risen enormously
.. the Commonwealth gladly gave up about UKP60,000 revenue with a
view to a suppression of the evil, but the result has not been what
has been hoped for. What now appears to be the effect of total
prohibition is that, while we have lost the duty, the opium is still
imported freely."
Victimless crimes - ranging from drugs to prostitution - are a
sure-fire recipe for police and political corruption. Alcohol
prohibition in the US led to corruption and organised crime.
Prohibition encourages consumers and suppliers to focus on drugs
offering the greatest "hit" (and health risks) for users and the
greatest profits for suppliers.
Greater expenditure on law enforcement, as advocated by the crime
commission, goes against the trend in most countries (including
Australia), which sees illicit drugs as primarily a health and social issue.
As drug reform pioneer Wodak (who introduced the first safe, but
illegal, injecting facility in Australia) argues the war on drugs has
failed comprehensively and the political elites know that prohibition
does not work. It continues because it is politically popular.
According to Wodak, penalties for drug possession and consumption
should be eliminated or reduced. He points out that resources
allocated to high-cost but low-impact sectors such as customs,
police, courts and prisons should be switched to low-cost and
high-impact health and social programs.
Reforms would include regulation and taxing the sale of cannabis and
possibly allowing the sale of some drugs in diluted small quantities,
as was the case with edible opium before 1906, or cocaine in
Coca-Cola before 1913.
Huge Profits Ensure That New Traffickers Are Always Ready to Fill Any Gaps.
THE report by The Age and Four Corners on a major drugs bust
(code-named Operation Hoffman) by state police forces under the
direction of the Australian Crime Commission was a cracking story. A
fascinating cast of goodies and baddies was set against the
background of a global drugs distribution chain, which was broken by
following the money trail.
The conclusion was that even with regular disruptions to the supply
chain and the operators being given heavy jail sentences, the
extremely high profits are more than enough to ensure that new drug
rings will step into the breach.
If interruptions to supply chains were working, we would see low
availability of drugs and high prices leading to reduced consumption.
Evidence from overseas - where the policy emphasis is on cutting
supplies - shows that drugs are in fact more readily available,
prices have fallen dramatically, the purity of hard drugs is
increasing and the market is growing.
But the conclusion drawn by the crime commission from Operation
Hoffman is that it needs more resources to follow the international
money trail.
The 2008-09 Illicit Drug Data Report ramps up the rhetoric. The drugs
of choice for today's young are amphetamines and ecstasy. The report
states that amphetamines, even in small doses, can cause
cardiovascular problems and convulsions leading to death. Long-term
use can trigger violent behaviour, and structural and functional
changes to the brain, leading to psychosis.
According to the commission, ecstasy (in high doses) can result in
liver, kidney or cardiovascular system failure and death. Long-term
use can cause paranoia, insomnia, nausea, hypothermia and severe
hallucinations, and can damage cognitive and memory functions.
I am sure that this is true, but it should be kept in proportion. The
damage done to individuals and the harm caused to society by these
drugs (even the most lethal illicit drugs, such as heroin) is small
compared with the harm done by legal drugs such as alcohol and tobacco.
According to a 2003 study undertaken for the British cabinet, and
later published by The Guardian, heroin and/or crack users were
responsible for the vast majority of the cost of drug-motivated
crime, that ecstasy was unlikely to cause significant health damage,
and that amphetamines had medium health risks.
Heavy use of amphetamines or ecstasy could affect users' ability to
work and to care for others, but was unlikely to motivate crime.
Attempts at supply intervention should be concentrated on "hard"
drugs, because heroin and/or crack users are the "high harm-causing users".
But as the British report said, even if supply interventions did
successfully increase the price, the evidence was not sufficiently
strong to prove that this would reduce harm. While shortages might
drive some users to get treatment for their addiction, it might also
induce some users to undertake more criminal activity to satisfy
their addiction.
Let's put this into a historical context. Up until 1906, it was legal
to import edible opium into Australia.
In a speech to the Lowy Institute, Alex Wodak, the director of
alcohol and drug services at Sydney's St Vincent's hospital, quoted
the 1908 annual report to the Commonwealth Parliament by the
comptroller-general of customs, which said: "It is very doubtful if
such prohibition has lessened to an extent the amount which is
brought into Australia ...
"Owing to total prohibition, the price of opium has risen enormously
.. the Commonwealth gladly gave up about UKP60,000 revenue with a
view to a suppression of the evil, but the result has not been what
has been hoped for. What now appears to be the effect of total
prohibition is that, while we have lost the duty, the opium is still
imported freely."
Victimless crimes - ranging from drugs to prostitution - are a
sure-fire recipe for police and political corruption. Alcohol
prohibition in the US led to corruption and organised crime.
Prohibition encourages consumers and suppliers to focus on drugs
offering the greatest "hit" (and health risks) for users and the
greatest profits for suppliers.
Greater expenditure on law enforcement, as advocated by the crime
commission, goes against the trend in most countries (including
Australia), which sees illicit drugs as primarily a health and social issue.
As drug reform pioneer Wodak (who introduced the first safe, but
illegal, injecting facility in Australia) argues the war on drugs has
failed comprehensively and the political elites know that prohibition
does not work. It continues because it is politically popular.
According to Wodak, penalties for drug possession and consumption
should be eliminated or reduced. He points out that resources
allocated to high-cost but low-impact sectors such as customs,
police, courts and prisons should be switched to low-cost and
high-impact health and social programs.
Reforms would include regulation and taxing the sale of cannabis and
possibly allowing the sale of some drugs in diluted small quantities,
as was the case with edible opium before 1906, or cocaine in
Coca-Cola before 1913.
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