Ecstasy
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161 UK: Urinals Are New Battleground In Britain's War On DrugsFri, 18 Mar 2016
Source:Independent (UK) Author:Milmo, Cahal Area:United Kingdom Lines:77 Added:03/18/2016

Samples Collected at Nightclubs Can Provide Data on Which Substances Are Being Used and Where

For decades, the war on drugs has been fought on fronts from the jungles of Latin America to the classroom. But now the struggle to understand the use of illegal substances has reached a new low - the nation's urinals.

Scientists in charge of tracking drug use across Europe, in particular the booming use of so-called "legal highs", have put forward proposals to use samples from urinals in locations such as nightclubs and music festivals to try to work out which illicit substances are being consumed.

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162 UK: Column: Lib Dems Call For Drugs ReformThu, 10 Mar 2016
Source:Birmingham Post (UK) Author:Walker, Jonathan Area:United Kingdom Lines:130 Added:03/11/2016

LIBERAL Democrats say there's a case for setting up cannabis shops allowing people to buy the drug in their local high street.

But how many people in the West Midlands take cannabis or other drugs - - and is drug use rising or falling?

Here's what the official figures tell us about drug use in the West Midlands.

In the West Midlands, 6.9 per cent of the population aged 16 to 59 say they have taken cannabis at least once last year. That's about one in 15 people. It's about the same as the national average.

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163 Australia: Editorial: End Polarising Stand-Off and Trial PillSun, 06 Mar 2016
Source:Sun-Herald (Australia)          Area:Australia Lines:70 Added:03/07/2016

No one wants another summer of deaths at music festivals. Not the organisers, the health experts, the government, the festival-goers. Nor the parents left to wonder and worry when their children go to these events.

But how to prevent it? The best efforts of police, teams of sniffer dogs and the threat of arrest have failed to make a dent in Australia's love affair with "party drugs". We are many years into the relationship and use has not decreased. Meanwhile, the potency of ecstasy has shot up and new psychoactive substances are coming onto the market, increasing the risks for those taking illicit substances and making it harder for medical personnel to work out the best treatment for sufferers.

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164 Australia: Editorial: An Attitude From The Nixon ArkSat, 05 Mar 2016
Source:Canberra Times (Australia)          Area:Australia Lines:93 Added:03/07/2016

Of all the conflicts that the United States embarked upon in the past 100 years, President Richard Nixon's war on drugs - launched in June 1971 - was arguably the most futile.

The aim was to reduce the illegal trade in drugs by criminalising their production, sale, possession and consumption. An army law enforcement agency equipped with all the resources the most prosperous and technologically advanced nation on earth could muster was enlisted to reinforce this prohibition.

However, for all the national treasure expended and the millions of lives lost or blighted, the war has achieved little. Estimates of the size of the US' illicit drug trade are far from precise, but it's estimated that users spend about $100 billion annually, sustaining and enriching large criminal organisations inside and outside the country.

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165 Australia: Editorial: Drug Decriminalisation HelpsWed, 02 Mar 2016
Source:Age, The (Australia)          Area:Australia Lines:80 Added:03/02/2016

This week federal parliamentarians will discuss with world experts ways to minimise harm caused by illicit drugs. At a national drug summit, legislators will also be reminded of the sobering reality that Australians consume illegal drugs at concerning levels. A 2014 United Nations report found, for example, Australians lead the world in ecstasy use.

The so-called war on drugs has failed, here and in every nation that embraced it. Former Victorian police commissioner and head of the National Ice Taskforce Ken Lay last year encapsulated the views of many informed people when he said "we can't arrest our way out of this". Former UN chief Kofi Annan made the same case in these pages only last Sunday.

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166 US NY: Peace on Drugs: An Addict's Perspective on the Drug PlanWed, 02 Mar 2016
Source:Ithaca Times (NY) Author:Cone, Jaime Area:New York Lines:194 Added:03/02/2016

On Feb. 23, the night before Mayor Svante Myrick officially announced the city's new drug plan, there was a panel discussion on the history of municipal drug policy. Ithaca resident Herebeorht Howland-Bolton, 26, surprised the audience of about 150 people gathered at Cinemapolis when he spoke up during the question-and-answer period. He told the audience he had overdosed just four hours earlier in his apartment on the Commons. His girlfriend, Janice, 20, who asked that her last name not be printed in this article, found him unresponsive on the floor and called 911.

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167 Indonesia: OPED: On The Brink Of FailureSat, 27 Feb 2016
Source:Jakarta Post (Indonesia)          Area:Indonesia Lines:38 Added:02/29/2016

The recent arrest of a number of soldiers, a police officer and a lawmaker for drug possession constitutes an achievement for the team involved and as well as a nightmare for the nation. The number of police and military personnel who were caught is an indication of the strong grip drug syndicates have on those institutions.

It is regrettable that law enforcers who should be fighting drug trafficking and soldiers who are given the duty of protecting the nation were involved in drug crimes.

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168 South Africa: Column: Know Why You're WantedSat, 27 Feb 2016
Source:Citizen, The (South Africa) Author:Duvera, Munya Area:South Africa Lines:70 Added:02/28/2016

Supply and Demand: The Rules Can Play Tricks With the Unwary

Having the best product on the market means very little when no one wants it any more.

Heroin, cocaine and ecstasy, to name a few commonly known drugs, have been a menace to governments worldwide. Billions are spent every year on the war on drugs and a greater portion of that is allocated to battling the supply end.

But the problematic issue is really on the demand side, coming from those who buy and consume drugs.

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169 Singapore: Editorial: Guard Against Lure Of InsidiousWed, 24 Feb 2016
Source:Straits Times (Singapore)          Area:Singapore Lines:68 Added:02/24/2016

Some countries are legalising the use of certain pernicious drugs, like cannabis, but Singapore cannot afford to contemplate that prospect. Not after having struggled with drug abuse since its founding. Indeed, it was a distribution centre for opium during colonial times.

By the time its British rulers awoke to the need for anti-drug laws, addiction had worked its way through society, leading to various forms of experimentation, even among schoolchildren. That prompted the setting up of the Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB) in 1971. Over four decades later, the agency is still waging war against the scourge.

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170 CN BC: Column: Young People Do DrugsMon, 22 Feb 2016
Source:Capilano Courier, The (CN BC Edu) Author:Scorgie, Gabe Area:British Columbia Lines:68 Added:02/24/2016

VIU's New Overdose Kits Won't Lead to Increased Drug Use

I'm sure that at some point in history there was a time where people's safety and well-being was a primary concern. Maybe not for everyone, since no period of time is exempt from having a few nasty genocides and wars, but at least for the safety of the children and young adults of a community. Apparently, as liberal as BC likes to think it is, we still fall short of the mark.

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171 UK: LibDems Unveil Drug Policy to Treat Rather Than Jail DrugMon, 22 Feb 2016
Source:Herald, The (Glasgow, UK)          Area:United Kingdom Lines:51 Added:02/23/2016

PEOPLE caught with drugs for personal use would be referred for health treatment rather than sent to jail under proposals unveiled by the Scottish Liberal Democrats.

Leader Willie Rennie said Scotland's current drugs policy "is costly and fails to work for everyone".

Drugs misuse costs society UKP3.5 billion a year amounting to around UKP900 for every adult in Scotland, he said.

The LibDems will call for drug users to be "referred for treatment, education or civil penalties, ending the use of i mpr i s on ment " , in a ma n i fe sto p ol ic y put forward for discussion at its Scottish spring conference this week.

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172 UK: Scottish LibDems: Decriminalise All Personal Drug UseSun, 21 Feb 2016
Source:Sunday Herald, The (UK) Author:Gordon, Tom Area:United Kingdom Lines:76 Added:02/21/2016

Under Scottish LibDem proposals, possession of small amounts of heroin for personal use would mean a police warning rather than a court appearance

HEROIN, cocaine and ecstasy users should face police warnings instead of prison if found with small amounts of drugs for personal use, the Scottish LibDems will argue this week. The party will use its spring conference to advocate decriminalising drug use - as opposed to drug dealing in a fundamental reform of how addiction is dealt with by the authorities.

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173 US: Traffickers Con Seniors To Smuggle, Officials SayThu, 11 Feb 2016
Source:New York Times (NY) Author:Nixon, Ron Area:United States Lines:89 Added:02/12/2016

WASHINGTON - In what law enforcement officials describe as a new front in international smuggling, global traffickers and cartels are increasingly turning to a new source for couriers to smuggle drugs across international borders: vulnerable American older adults.

The traffickers deceive seniors with promises of prizes or relationships, setting them up to unknowingly try to carry luggage filled with cocaine or other items through customs, hoping they will not arouse suspicions. Such cases have been seen in nearly a dozen foreign countries, officials say. Details of the smuggling and a counteroperation that officials called Operation Cocoon were disclosed by the Department of Homeland Security during a hearing on Wednesday before the Senate Special Committee on Aging.

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174CN AB: Officers Warn Students About Deadly DrugFri, 12 Feb 2016
Source:Edmonton Journal (CN AB) Author:Ellwand, Otiena Area:Alberta Lines:Excerpt Added:02/12/2016

Opioid fentanyl has been linked to 272 deaths in Alberta last year

Police school resource officers hope to start a conversation with 29,000 Edmonton high school students this winter about the dangers of fentanyl and its even more deadly cousin, W-18.

If you look at the statistics, every year there are more and more deaths happening, so we want to get kids informed about what this is.

The first of 21 school presentations about fentanyl, an opioid linked to 272 deaths last year in Alberta, was heard Thursday by more than 850 students at Austin O'Brien High School.

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175 New Zealand: Arrests For Drug Use Slightly Up In DecemberMon, 08 Feb 2016
Source:Marlborough Express (New Zealand) Author:Eder, Jennifer Area:New Zealand Lines:68 Added:02/10/2016

Marlborough police are finding more drug users and less drug dealers, according to new police data.

Police statistical indicators for December showed Marlborough police caught more than twice as many people using illicit drugs in December last year, compared to the previous year.

Nineteen people in Marlborough were caught using drugs in December last year, compared with nine in December 2014.

However, the number of people caught selling illegal drugs decreased by more than half, from 14 in December 2014 to five in the same month last year.

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176 CN NK: Edu: Drugs From The Dark WebWed, 03 Feb 2016
Source:Brunswickan, The (Edu CN NK) Author:McCullum, Sean Area:New Brunswick Lines:181 Added:02/04/2016

The box came from Amsterdam.

Casey Stone (pseudonym) and his three friends had waited weeks for the package to arrive. Finally, a Canada Post worker dropped off a brown box. It was addressed to one of Stone's friends and had just been flown in from the Dutch capital.

Inside the box was a smaller box from a tea company. On top of it sat a letter from the tea company thanking the new customers for their patronage. They opened the box and pulled out a tea bag. Inside the bag was three grams of 3.4-methylenedioxy-methamphetamine, also known as Molly.

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177 Australia: PUB LTE: Time to Cease the Ineffectual War WithoutSat, 23 Jan 2016
Source:Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Author:Weller, Joe Area:Australia Lines:36 Added:01/24/2016

The Herald identifies that organised crime groups have become so successful at importing drugs into Australia that the wholesale price being paid for ice, cocaine and ecstasy has dramatically fallen in the past 18 months ("Drug supply soars as imports get cheaper", January 22).

Australia has been involved in other wars that were debacles: Vietnam and Iraq. But even those saw governments of the day eventually admit the country's folly and withdraw.

I can only hope that our longest war, that on drugs, will reach a similar ignominious end in my lifetime. Then perhaps all the politicians with an interest in this war - as well as law enforcement officers, judicial and magisterial officers, corrections officers, lawyers, probation and parole officers - can begin to put their efforts into something that is not such a stupendous dead end, insofar as the betterment of society is concerned.

I am worried that there may be some truth in the words of a police officer in that superb crime drama, The Wire, when he said "the war on drugs is not a war because wars have an end".

Joe Weller Lewisham

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178 Australia: Every Cop Car Is A Potential Drug TestSat, 23 Jan 2016
Source:Northern Star (Australia) Author:Gulbin, Melissa Area:Australia Lines:65 Added:01/24/2016

But Cannabis Users Say They Are Avoiding Detection

POLICE have warned Northern Rivers cannabis users that every police car is a potential drug testing unit.

But cannabis users say they are outsmarting mobile drug swab tests by swigging vinegar, gargling mouthwash, drinking chocolate milk and chewing on vitamin C.

Thousands of people are using Facebook groups to avoid roadside drug tests.

With one in four Northern Rivers motorists testing positive for cannabis between April and December 2015 an average of 141 positive tests every month literally thousands of residents have taken to social media to prevent detection.

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179 Australia: Drug Supply Soars As Imports Get CheaperFri, 22 Jan 2016
Source:Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Author:Ralston, Nick Area:Australia Lines:87 Added:01/22/2016

Sydney Awash With Cocaine, Ice, Ecstasy

Organised crime groups have become so successful at importing drugs into Australia that the wholesale price being paid for ice, cocaine and ecstasy has dramatically fallen in the past 18 months.

The NSW Crime Commission says the illegal drug trade remains the main source of income for organised crime in Australia and at present illicit substances are in "plentiful supply".

Fairfax Media has learnt that the wholesale price paid by Australian criminal groups to import cocaine from overseas was as high as $280,000 a kilogram three years ago. Eighteen months ago it had dropped to $240,000 a kilogram and now sells below $200,000 and as low as $180,000. The cost for a kilogram of ice has fallen in the past 18 months from $220,000 to as low as $95,000 and ecstasy had dropped from $65,000 to $37,000.

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180CN BC: Lions Bay Mother Says System Failed Son In His Time Of NeedWed, 13 Jan 2016
Source:Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Author:Crawford, Tiffany Area:British Columbia Lines:Excerpt Added:01/15/2016

Ryan Norris spent years trying to find help for his mental illness and addiction before dying of suspected fentanyl overdose

Ryan Norris, described as a kind-hearted person and once promising athlete, spent his last days trying to get help for his addiction.

His spirits lifted, his mother Christine says, when he heard a space had become available at the Sage Health Centre in Kamloops, one of several treatment centres where he was wait-listed.

His bags were packed when, about a week before he died, he received a call that the space was no longer available. He became despondent, and left the house in what his mother believes was a search for heroin to ease his pain.

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