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News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Drug-Related Crime Spikes
Title:Canada: Drug-Related Crime Spikes
Published On:2004-02-24
Source:Winnipeg Sun (CN MB)
Fetched On:2008-01-18 20:24:00
DRUG-RELATED CRIME SPIKES

Anti-Dope Programs Slammed

OTTAWA -- Canada's drug-related crime rate has hit a 20-year high --proof
the federal anti-drug strategy has been an abject failure, critics say.
Figures released by Statistics Canada yesterday show the police-reported
crime rate has shot up by 42% since the early 1990s. Youth and young adults
are the biggest offenders, the report reveals.

"This shows their overall drug strategy hasn't worked," said Conservative
MP Peter MacKay.

"One would have to question the wisdom of proceeding with the
decriminalization of marijuana, knowing that there are still all kinds of
negative societal impacts tied directly to cannabis use."

The StatsCan report shows an upward trend since 1993, with more possession,
production and importation offences. Of the 93,000 violations of the
Controlled Drugs and Substances Act reported by police in 2002, about
two-thirds were for possession and 22% for trafficking.

Figures also reveal young adults age 18-24 had the highest drug-crime rate
in 2002 and that cannabis was a factor in about 20% of drug-related homicides.

'Sheer Folly'

But NDP MP Pat Martin, whose party wants to legalize marijuana, insisted
weed is rarely a sole factor in violent crime. He called it "sheer folly"
that the Liberal government would try to combat drug abuse with harsh fines
and the heavy hand of the law instead of public education.

"It's madness to clog up our judicial system trying to lock up a whole
generation of kids," he said. "And it's clearly not working."

Liberal MP Dan McTeague, who lashed out against his own government's pot
decriminalization bill in the House of Commons yesterday, called the
release of the StatsCan report a "sad day" for a nation that strives to be
drug-free.

"We're losing the battle against drugs," he said. "Drug usage is on a steep
incline, organized crime is on a steep incline, yet apparently our response
is shrugging our shoulders."

Reaching New Highs

Number of drug offences in 2002 (increase from 1992 in brackets):

- - Manitoba 2,672 (14%)

- - B.C. 22,525 (24%)

- - Saskatchewan 3,552 (97%)

- - New Brunswick 2,596 (134%)

- - Quebec 20,166 (81%)

- - Nova Scotia 2,515 (24%)

- - P.E.I. 339 (52%)

- - Alberta 7,525 (12%)

- - Ontario 29,027 (37%)

- - Nfld. and Labrador 900 (20%)

- - Canada 92,590 (42%)

- -- Canadian Centre for Justice Statistics, 2002 Reaching new highs
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