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News (Media Awareness Project) - New Zealand: Editorial: 'Demonising' Drugs Does More Harm Than Good
Title:New Zealand: Editorial: 'Demonising' Drugs Does More Harm Than Good
Published On:2007-03-09
Source:New Zealand Herald (New Zealand)
Fetched On:2008-01-12 11:05:30
'DEMONISING' DRUGS DOES MORE HARM THAN GOOD

Drug laws are driven by "moral panic" says a new study which
concludes that most drugs have been wrongly "demonised".

An independent study also recommended the setting up of "shooting
galleries" where users can inject drugs safely.

The two year study by the Royal Society for the Encouragement of
Arts, Manufactures and Commerce, or RSA argued that "whether we like
it or not, drugs are and will remain a fact of life".

"On that basis, the aim of the law should be to reduce the amounts of
harms caused to individuals, their friends and families, their
children and their communities."

"The use of illegal drugs is by no means always harmful any more than
alcohol use is always harmful," Professor Anthony King of Essex
University, the commission chairman told Britain's Daily Telegraph.

Professor King added: "The evidence suggests that a majority of
people who use drugs are able to use them without harming themselves
or others... The harmless use of illegal drugs is thus possible,
indeed common."

The commission, composed of academics, politicians, drug workers,
journalists and a senior police officer, said Britain wastes large
amounts of money wasted on futile efforts to stop supply rather than
going after the criminal networks behind the drugs.

The report, which aims to influence a government drug strategy review
due next year, argued that jail sentences should be handed out for
only the most serious drug-related crimes and for addicts to be given
jobs and housing as part of treatment.

A spokesman for London's Metropolitan Police told AP news agency that
the force supported the idea of "measuring the amount of harm reduced
and reducing drugs supply by the targeting of organized criminal
networks responsible."

But conservative politicians have condemned the report as complacent
and wrong-headed.

What do you think? Should drug laws be relaxed because drugs are
prevalent and, at times, "harmless".
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