Pubdate: Wed, 16 Apr 2003
Source: Ventura County Star (CA)
Copyright: 2003, The E.W. Scripps Co.
Contact:  http://www.staronline.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/479

CRITICS: U.S.-LED DRUG WAR FAILED

VIENNA, Austria (AP) -- Critics of a U.S.-led global crackdown on illicit
drugs declared the policy a failure Tuesday, calling it "the war that
America cannot win" and urging a United Nations commission to consider other
approaches to the problem.

Activists, think tanks and non-governmental organizations asked the U.N.
Commission on Narcotic Drugs to examine what they called a disturbing lack
of progress midway through a global campaign to curb drug cultivation,
trafficking and consumption by 2008. Their harsh assessment came as
delegates from 116 countries met in Vienna to review the ambitious anti-drug
effort, launched by the U.N. General Assembly in 1998 and loosely modeled
after the United States' "war on drugs."

"This strategy has failed," the European Drug Policy Fund said in a
statement. "Far from making progress toward the goal of a 'drug-free world
by 2008,' drug consumption is in effect on the rise in both industrial and
developing countries, as are drug-related crime and other social
ill-effects."

Consensus is building in Europe "that after years of continuous setbacks,
and with billions of dollars spent on destroying crops and putting people in
jail, it is now time to look at more promising alternatives," the statement
said.

The Open Society Institute, a private foundation started by financier George
Soros, said the U.N.'s strict drug control treaties are undermining efforts
to prevent the spread of AIDS because they discourage countries from
introducing effective public health measures.

It pointed to Russia and Ukraine, two countries it said have paid more
attention to cracking down on traffickers than on the health consequences of
intravenous drug use -- and now have some of the world's fastest-growing
rates of HIV infection.

AIDS cases also are rising rapidly in Iran and Pakistan and across Central
Asia where, the OSI said, authorities are cracking down on drug cultivation
and trafficking at the expense of treatment and prevention programs.

Despite the criticism, this week's conference -- organized by the
Vienna-based U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime -- appeared unlikely to steer
the United Nations away from its goals of ridding the world of as much drug
use and crime as possible over the next five years. Hassela Nordic Network,
a Swedish organization, presented the U.N. agency Monday with 1.3 million
signatures collected from people in 48 countries supporting the ongoing
anti-drug campaign.

On the Net: U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime www.unodc.org
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