Pubdate: Fri, 14 Mar 2008
Source: Times of India, The (India)
Copyright: Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. 2008
Contact:  http://www.timesofindia.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/453
Author: Jug Suraiya

IF DRUGS WERE LEGAL, SCARLETT MIGHT BE ALIVE

If drugs were not banned, would Scarlett Keeling, the British teenager
who was raped and murdered in Goa, be alive today? Perhaps.

It was not drugs that killed Scarlett; it was the criminalisation of
drugs that led to her death and to the subsequent cover-up attempt by
the local police who allegedly are in collaboration with the drug
mafias, mainly from Russia and Israel, who have reportedly set up
operations in the state.

Scarlett's murder raises a question often asked by libertarians: Does
the prohibition of certain substances (tobacco, liquor, drugs) do more
harm than good? In the case of liquor, the experience with prohibition
worldwide, from the US to Stalinist Russia, has been emphatically negative.

Indeed, the growth of the mafia in the US has been traced to
prohibition. In India, sporadic or piecemeal attempts at prohibition
in various parts of the country have led to organised bootlegging,
rampant corruption, gang wars and liquor deaths caused by toxic moonshine.

There is medical evidence to suggest that both tobacco and liquor have
more long-term deleterious effects on health than most if not all
drugs (nicotine, one of the most poisonous substances known, is said
to be several times more addictive than heroin).

Despite this, drugs are almost universally banned -- and equally
universally used -- while liquor and tobacco are, more or less, freely
available in many if not most parts of the world.

Thanks to largely unchallenged convention, liquor and cigarettes are
both seen by legislators and by society in general as 'less immoral'
than drugs. (Though in the Indic tradition, drugs like charas are
routinely used by sadhus and tantriks, and bhang is a staple of Holi.)

A 'dope fiend' or a 'crack head' is deemed to be a greater threat both
to himself and to others than an alcoholic or a chain-smoker. This is
mainly because using or dealing in drugs is seen to be a criminal act,
while using or dealing in liquor or tobacco is not.

Drugs, by themselves, may well be less harmful, addictive or
life-threatening than either liquor or tobacco (marijuana, for
example, has proven medical benefits, including that of giving pain
relief to cancer patients); what is harmful and life-threatening is
the criminalisation of drugs through their proscription.

The legitimisation of drugs is not a moral issue; it is an economic
issue. There is just too much money to be made in drugs -- by drug
lords, dealers, pushers and corrupt law enforcement officials -- for
the trade ever to be legalised, thereby bringing down prices hugely
and putting paid to corruption.

In the End of Faith Sam Harris notes that the UN has estimated the
international drug trade at $400 billion a year, a sum larger than the
US defence budget and which constitutes 8 per cent of all global trade
(textiles account for 7.5 per cent and automobiles for 5.3 per cent).

"The total cost of our (US) drug laws could easily be in excess of
$100 billion each year. Our war on drugs consumes an estimated 50 per
cent of the trial time of our courts and the full-time energies of
over 4,00,000 police officers. These are resources that might
otherwise be used to fight violent crime and terrorism."

Harris concludes that it is prohibition itself which has made the drug
business so lucrative, with profit margins ranging from 5,000 per cent
to 20,000 per cent, and thereby impossible to eradicate.

Forget morality or public health issues. The real reason that drugs
can never be legitimised is purely economic. Just too many people -- in
Goa and elsewhere -- are making too much money thanks to the ban.

By driving drugs underground so that their dealership is in the hands
of criminals rather than legitimate, and accountable, entrepreneurs,
prohibition increases the risk factor, not just for drug users but
also for the community as a whole which faces the consequences of
organised crime networks, on the one hand, and a corrupt 'enforcement'
machinery, on the other.

Legalise drugs? Scandalous idea. But is it any more, or less,
scandalous than the possibly preventable death of Scarlett, and many
more like her? A question, perhaps, whose time has come to be asked.
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