Pubdate: Mon, 18 Feb 2008
Source: New Zealand Herald (New Zealand)
Copyright: 2008 New Zealand Herald
Contact: http://info.nzherald.co.nz/letters/
Website: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/300
Author: David Eames

DRUG LAWS 'HOPELESSLY OUT OF DATE'

New Zealand's "hopelessly out of date and irrelevant" drug laws need a
shake-up to fight a changing narcotics landscape.

That's the message leading drug workers will take to two high-powered
conferences in Wellington this week.

At the Beyond 2008 Regional Consultation for Australasia, delegates
from community organisations meet to discuss alternative answers to
the drug problem.

It is the first time New Zealand groups will have the chance to
influence international policy.

The delegates will push for a move away from the predominantly United
States-led "war on drugs", to a more treatment-based approach.

"While we can admire their intentions, the cold hard facts tell us
that the world community has largely failed in its official
drug-control efforts and questions are now being asked about whether
the current structures are fit for purpose,"Drug Foundation executive
director Ross Bell said.

The findings from the meeting will be taken with feedback from other
regional forums to a non-governmental agencies conference in Vienna
later this year.

The focus shifts to the New Zealand drug problem on Wednesday, when
the delegates will meet politicians and law makers to push for changes
to drug legislation amid evidence that cannabis is out of favour and
synthetic drugs are far more popular.

Mr Bell said the Drug Policy Roundtable would discuss what made good
drug policy and whether New Zealand's Misuse of Drugs Act was still
workable despite being decades old and due for an overhaul.

"The Misuse of Drugs Act has become hopelessly out of date and
irrelevant in the 32 years since it became law," he said.

"A raft of ad hoc amendments has led to inconsistencies and confusion,
and its underlying philosophy no longer reflects the harm-minimisation
approach of our national drug policy."

The act was plagued by two main problems: a criminal justice approach
to drug use was favoured over a health-based system, and new drug and
crime patterns had developed in the past three decades.

Six politicians from across the political spectrum will attend the
meeting, and drug agencies plan to exploit the fact that it is an
election year.

"This is the opportunity for politicians to see that the issues are
complex, and there are new and better ways to deal with these issues,"
Mr Bell said.

"Dealing with drugs is going to require a bit of sense and a lot of
understanding."

Statistics New Zealand figures show that while overall drug offending
has remained relatively stable in the nine years since 1998, "new
drug" offending has risen steadily since the category was introduced
in 2003.

"New drugs" refer to narcotics such as methamphetamine, Ecstasy and
Fantasy.

Recorded instances of possession for supply of new drugs have
increased steadily since records began in 2003, and simple possession
offences increased four-fold in the same period.

Recorded instances of crime involving cannabis have almost halved
since 1996, while instances of possession of amphetamines for supply
rose from 60 in 2003 to 179 in 2006.

National Addictions Centre director Doug Sellman said it was time a
more "rational" approach was taken to drug legislation, by "thinking
about all drugs in general", including the legal ones such as alcohol
and tobacco.

Mr Sellman told the Weekend Herald he wanted to see two major changes
in drug legislation: an expanding of the drug scale from justice
system-run class A, B and C to a health-based scale that included
classes D, E and F.

Such a reclassification would include all drugs, graded from "very
high" public health risk, to "very low", he said.

The war on drugs had failed, and Mr Sellman said he now wanted to see
law makers try to "tame" drug use.

Simply "declaring war" on drugs only made the problem "wilder".
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MAP posted-by: Derek