URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v15/n102/a04.html
Newshawk: Kirk
Votes: 2
Pubdate: Mon, 16 Feb 2015
Source: Daily Cardinal (U of WI, Madison, Edu)
Copyright: 2015 The Daily Cardinal Newspaper Corporation
Contact:
Website: http://dailycardinal.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/712
Author: Hae Rin
LEGALIZING DRUGS WILL SOLVE MORE PROBLEMS THAN IT CAUSES
The illegal drug market causes damage in many developing nations, but
there are two countries with major drug booms: Afghanistan and Myanmar.
Both countries have a long history of being ravaged by endless
conflicts. Amid great confusion, the opium market has bloomed. In
Afghanistan, many farmers carry massive debts from the drug traffickers
after receiving their help during the start-up period. Unfortunately,
most end up never being able to pay the money back as government raids
often destroy the crops that were promised to the drug dealers as
payment. If such unplanned obstacles appear, many farmers are trapped
between two extreme solutions. They either give up their family to the
drug dealers for collateral, or they have to flee their land. Both
options are very dangerous, and many find themselves taken as hostages
or killed. The government intervention of directly destroying the opium
fields has turned out to be highly ineffective-farmers encounter
desperate troubles that can only be solved through extreme means. The
illegal drugs also help give power to militant groups such as the
Taliban. They control the opium market and continue to strengthen from
its profit. While the fields are getting destroyed, there are new fields
created to make up the loss and the efforts of the government only
victimize the poor. Therefore, the Afghan government is being
ineffective in solving the problem.
In Myanmar, the situation is not so different. Opium farming is
considered necessary to increase incomes for the poor farmers. Because
of ongoing civil wars that have taken away other compensatory options,
farmers have turned to opium farming for a living. Due to the increasing
demand from neighboring China, the farmers have more incentive to
produce the plants for sale. However, there has been a rise in
opium-related health problems in the country. As the government has
launched laws against opium production in order to stop the abuse of
drugs, it has become difficult for people to obtain pure opium. In a
pinch, people have been consuming opium in the form of injections, which
has led to the recent rise in the spread of HIV and other diseases
through the shared needle uses.
However harmful and evil this industry may seem, it feeds many people's
hunger. According to the latest report from the United Nations Office on
Drugs and Crime, the rate of drug cultivation and use has been rising.
In 2013 poppy cultivation in Myanmar rose by 13 percent on the previous
year, to 57,800 hectares ( 143,000 acres ). The combination of more
cultivation and higher yields has resulted in a more than 25 percent
rise in opium production in Myanmar since 2012.
No matter how necessary the production of opium may be for making a
living, the damages are high. The massive production of opium not only
damages the lives of farmers, but also the lives of the people addicted
to the drug. The damage will continue as long as the high demand in the
market remains unregulated. What could be the solution that can help
both the suppliers and addicted consumers?
One idea is the possible legalization of drugs-not to encourage people
to become drug addicts, but to drive the severity of drug problems down.
Hypothetically, if a government legalizes certain products, then the
prices usually decrease because there is no need to go to underground
sources to obtain products.
I think the reason why the cost of illegal drugs are so high is because
the government made them illegal. Instead of spending money on border
security and hunting down transporters, governments could focus on
prevention efforts and financial support of subsistence
farmers-subsidies, tax reductions, provisions of specific money for a
fixed amount of time-to allow them to switch into normal farming. The
legalization of drugs to lower their prices and prevent people from
committing crimes related to their purchase. I am fully aware that this
legalization could have some negative effects such as moral decline and
addictions, however, the current market of illegal drugs reflect how
unfairly wealth is distributed and how the poor is exposed to more
dangers and miseries.
The addiction rates in both Myanmar and Afghanistan are already high
enough to make this a social problem. When the products and policies
become legal, the money saved on enforcement could be spent on the
improvement of prevention methods, making it legal for people to seek
active help to escape addiction and return back to the workforce. Many
addicts are not offered help as their drug use marks them as criminals,
eliminating ways to improve themselves and allowing the problem to
persist. It would be hard for governments to reach these audiences as
civil wars are making access to these populations difficult. Then,
non-governmental organizations or international support groups could
help the farmers and addicted consumers to improve themselves. If the
addiction rates are high enough to be a great problem, shouldn't that be
acknowledged lawfully to provide appropriate care? Drugs will never be
eliminated permanently. They will always be a problem, but we can try to
reduce the severity of it. We need to acknowledge it before solving it.
I am aware that drug problems are not simple situations, but I think the
important step in solving them is to break the economies of them. There
are not many examples of such attempts found around the world-my
argument may seem unreasonable and unrealistic-but perhaps our world
needs unconventional thinking to solve unconventional problems.
Hae Rin is a freshman majoring in history.
MAP posted-by: Matt
|