Please visit our Opiate Museum and don't forget to sign our GuestBook...Click here!


July 2010 - 7 out of 10 voters want public safe user rooms according to a recent published poll in Berlingske news.
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Wednesday 21. July we celebrated the International Memorial Day for deceased drug users in Copenhagen.
Previously we placed 239 black helium filled balloons swaying in the fresh wind and dramatically illustrating the still
far too high number of fatal overdoses in 2008.



145 photos from the Memorial ceremony is published at Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=195432&id=657408056&saved#!/photos.php?id=657408056
(you might need to register a profile at Facebook to be able to open the photo album)
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Sensational speech by the ex-president Bill Clinton of the United States, at the Opening Session of the XVIII
International AIDS conference where he said harm reduction works and urged governments to scale up
substitution treatment and needle exchange programs. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I-TPj6K9jKk
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Several leading INPUD activists have gathered in Vienna with many other international activist colleagues,
for the 18th. International AIDS conference. Tuesday evening they all participated in a large Human Rights
March.


Press Conference statement from INPUD as part of High Level Religious Leaders Meeting July 20.

"My name is Mat Southwell. I am project manager of the International Network of People who Use
Drugs (INPUD). Since the 1980s I have worked with religious leaders from a number of faiths as
part of our response to those members of our community living with and affected by HIV.
Through this time I have experienced religious leaders at their best and sadly sometimes at their
worst. HIV ensures that we are confronted by challenges of ill health, our own mortality and the
loss of our friends and peers. Too often key populations such as people who use drugs have felt
judged, condemned and abandoned by religious leaders. However, we have also worked with
some exceptional local religious leaders who have met us with humanity and compassion and
ministered to our communities in our time of need. I would like to give thanks and acknowledge
these exceptional local leaders. INPUD is committed to working with EAA, CORAID and UNAIDS
to advocate to make the exceptional the standard and to help ensure that when our community
seeks spiritual support, we are met with understanding, compassion and humanity. Tomorrow,
21st July, is International Remembrance Day when we remember those members of our
community who have died as a result of the War on Drugs. We ask you to all recognise our
losses and unnecessary suffering and to stand with us as we fight for the health, rights and
empowerment of our community. INPUD commits itself to this dialogue with High Level religious
leaders. We hope this process will ensure that the global response to HIV includes the spiritual
and pastoral aspects of our lives as people who have traditionally been viewed as other or
outsiders."

 



Human Rights March photos at:
http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?id=657408056&pid=4473227#!/photo.php?pid=349711&id=100000252971401

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July 9. 2010. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today announced the appointment of Yuri Fedotov ( Russian Federation) as the new Executive Director of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). He succeeds Antonio Maria Costa in that position and as Director-General of the United Nations Office at Vienna (UNOV).  The Secretary-General is grateful to Mr. Costa for the services he has rendered to the Organization and for his commitment in leading UNODC since 2002. Mr. Fedotov brings a wealth of senior-level experience to his new function, being well-informed regarding issues on the UNODC agenda:  rule of law; policy and trend analysis; prevention; treatment and reintegration; and alternative development.  UNODC is a global leader in the fight against illicit drugs and international crime, mandated to assist Member States in their struggles against illicit drugs, crime and terrorism. Currently the Russian Federation’s Ambassador to the United Kingdom, Mr. Fedotov has previously served as Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs and Deputy Permanent Representative to the United Nations in New York, having joined the diplomatic service in 1971. Mr. Fedotov is a Merited Member of the Diplomatic Service, and has also been awarded the Order of Friendship and the Certificate of Appreciation by the President of the Russian Federation. Born in 1947, he graduated from the Moscow State Institute of International Relations. He is married and has a son and a daughter.
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March 15. 2010. The Danish heroin on prescription treatment has started! at two clinics in the greater Copenhagen area
and one in Odense city on Fyn. Read the Danish Health Board's recommendations of the treatment at:
http://www.sst.dk/publ/Publ2009/EFT/Ordination/Rules_guidance_diacetylmorphine_27oct09.pdf
***
The Price of the Drug War
Donate Now!

$714 billion. That's the current federal deficit. An unbelievable number driven by many factors, including the "War on Drugs." Decades of drug war spending have pushed the annual cost of prohibition to almost $50 billion. If you wonder what drives your tax dollars, you need look no further than "The Federal, State, and Local Price of the Drug War" from Drug War Facts.* Prisons, wiretap devices, aviation units, media campaigns ... they all add up; we can no longer afford them. Here's a sample:

  • $48.7 billion in 2008 - Cost of drug prohibition. "...legalizing drugs would save roughly $48.7 billion per year in government expenditure on enforcement of prohibition. $33.1 billion of this savings would accrue to state and local governments, while $15.6 billion would accrue to the federal government. Approximately $13.7 billion of the savings would results from legalization of marijuana, $22.3 billion from legalization of cocaine and heroin, and $12.8 from legalization of other drugs."
    Source: Miron, Jeffrey A., PhD, "The Budgetary Implications of Drug Prohibition" (February 2010).

    http://www.economics.harvard.edu/faculty/miron/files/budget%202010%20Final.pdf
  • $6.2 billion in 2007 - Imprison drug offenders. "... the average daily cost per state prison inmate per day in the US is $67.55. State prisons held 253,300 inmates for drug offenses in 2007. That means states spent approximately $17.1 million per day to imprison drug offenders, or $6.2 billion per year.
    Source: American Correctional Association, "2006 Directory of Adult and Juvenile Correctional Departments, Institutions, Agencies and Probation and Parole Authorities" (2006). Bureau of Justice Statistics, "Prisoners in 2007" (December 2008).

    http://bjs.ojp.usdoj.gov/content/pub/pdf/p07.pdf
  • $1.4 billion in 2009 - Lost California revenue. "... the revenue effect of the bill [AB 390 to impose a fee of fifty dollars per ounce on the retail sale of marijuana in California] is an estimated total annual revenue gain of $1.4 billion, as follows: $990 million from the proposed $50 per ounce levy on retail sales of marijuana [and] $392 million in sales tax revenues."
    Source: Waltz, Debra A., "State Board of Equalization Staff Legislative Bill Analysis," California State Board of Equalization, California Assembly, Bill No: AB 390 (July 2009)

    http://www.boe.ca.gov/legdiv/pdf/ab0390-1dw.pdf

    If you agree that deficit spending on a futile drug war must stop, then you need to support organizations that are bringing about real change. DrugSense is one of them. We host websites from Drug War Facts* to the Reefer Madness Museum to the Drug Truth Network -- We're helping to get the word out worldwide. We're a full service media-focused organization that serves the community for drug policy change.
    Donate 
Now!We need your help RIGHT NOW! A generous supporter has challenged us to raise $25,000 from supporters just like you. In fact, this challenge effectively doubles your contribution, allowing your support to go even further.

    Donating is quick, easy, and secure. Just visit http://www.drugsense.org/donate. Plus, because DrugSense is a 501(c)(3) non-profit educational organization, your contribution is tax deductible, something you'll appreciate on the next April 15th.

    You can also make your check or money order payable to DrugSense and mail it to:

    DrugSense/MAP

    --------------------o0o-------------------


    Major Drug Conference in Mexican Drug War Says Prohibition Has Failed, Calls for New Policy

    By Phillip S. Smith, Drug War ChroniclePosted on February 26, 2010.

    http://www.alternet.org/story/145833/

    Editor's Note: With 137 people killled last week in the Mexican drug war, a conference on this topic couldn't come at a more opportune time.

    On Monday and Tuesday in Mexico City, political figures, academics, social scientists, security experts, and activists from at least six countries came together for the Winds of Change: Drug Policy in the World conference sponsored by the Mexico City-based Collective for an Integrated Drug Policy (CUPHID). Coming as Mexico's war on drugs turns bloodier by the day, the conference unsurprisingly concluded that current prohibitionist policies are a disaster.

    "The principal conclusion is that we need a more integrated drug policy based on prevention, scientific evidence, and full respect for human rights," summarized CUPHID president Jorge Hernandez Tinajero. "It remains clear that, yes, there exist alternatives to the current strategy."

    In a press release after the conference, CUPHID emphasized the following points. The so-called war on drugs has failed and, without doubt, we need "winds of change" to advance toward alternative policies to address the problematic of drugs across the globe. The prohibitionist paradigm has been ineffective, and furthermore, for the majority of countries it has implied grave violations of human rights and individual guarantees, discrimination, and social exclusion, as well as an escalation of violence that grows day by day, ever broadening the scope of impunity for organized crime. Drugs are never going to disappear. Thus, a more realistic drug policy should focus on minimizing the harms associated with drug use -- overdoses, blood-borne diseases like HIV/AIDS, and violence. This concept is known as "harm reduction," and must be the backbone of any drug policy.


    Colombia Cesar Gaviria, former President of Colombia, on left (courtesy comunidadsegura.org)

    The conference opened Monday morning by putting its star power on display. In its opening session, former Colombian President Cesar Gaviria, who, as a member of the Latin American Commission on Drugs and Democracy coauthored a report a year ago with former Brazilian President Henrique Cardoso and former Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo denouncing drug prohibition as a failed policy, returned to the theme. Noting that as president of Colombia in the 1990s, he had been a firm supporter of prohibition, Gaviria said he had changed his tune.
    "With the passing of time, prohibitionism, in which I believed, has demonstrated itself a failure," he told an attentive crowd jammed into a conference room of the Crowne Plaza Hotel in upscale Colonia Napoles. The attendant human rights abuses were a big reason why, he said.
    "You have to be very careful in the matter of human rights," Gaviria said. "The issue of militarization is so risky because militarization of the struggle against the drug trade, even though it may seem necessary and imperative at a given time, almost always veers into violations of human rights."
    Militarization is an especially prickly issue in Mexico, where President Calderon has deployed tens of thousands of soldiers in the war against drug trafficking organizations. While the military has failed to stop the so-called cartels or reduce the violence -- it has, in fact, increased dramatically since the military was deployed three years ago -- it has generated an increasing number of human rights complaints. According to the official National Commission on Human Rights, more than 1,900 complaints alleging abuses by the military -- ranging from harassment, theft, and illegal entry to torture, murder, and disappearances -- were filed in Mexico last year.
    Referring specifically to the Mexican situation, Gaviria added: "In the long run, one of the things that most delegitimizes public policies against drugs is when human rights are violated."
    Gaviria's comments sparked a quick reply from Deputy Carolina Viggiano of the opposition Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), who called Calderon's decision to send in the military "the worst mistake" of his administration and one that was likely to ruin the prestige of the Mexican military by the time his term ends in three years.
    While arguing that organized crime must sometimes be fought with extreme measures, such as anti-mafia laws and integrated counterintelligence operations, Gaviria also said that at some point, governments have to bring the traffickers in from the cold, perhaps by agreeing to let them plead guilty to offenses with short prison sentences. "Not 40 or 50 years in prison, but maybe eight or 10, and then the person can say, 'I'm done with this, I confess my crimes, I'll do my time, and that's that.' That is a solution with the justice system, not through militarization," he said.


    Jorge Castañeda

    If Gaviria was looking for reconciliation with the traffickers, his co-panelist former Mexican Foreign Minister Jorge Castañeda was a bit more provocative. He suggested that Mexico needs to go back to the "good old days" of rule by the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), at least when it comes to dealing with drug trafficking organizations.

    The PRI, of course, ruled Mexico in a virtual one-party state for 70 years before being defeated by Vicente Fox and the conservative National Action Party (PAN) in the 2000 elections. It was widely (and correctly) seen as not fighting the drug trade so much as managing it.

    Given the bloody mess that is the Mexican drug war today, perhaps it is time to return to a quiet arrangement with the cartels, Castañeda suggested. "How do we construct a modus vivendi?" he asked. "The Americans have a modus vivendi in Afghanistan," he noted pointedly. "They don't care if Afghanistan exports heroin to the rest of the world; they are at war with Al Qaeda."

    Castenada's comments on Afghanistan rang especially true this week, as American soldiers push through poppy fields in their offensive on Marja. The US has made an explicit decision to arrive at a modus vivendi with poppy farmers, although it still fights the trade by interdiction and going after traffickers -- or at least those linked to the Taliban.

    Casteneda also came up with another provocative example, especially for Mexican leftists in the audience. "We had a modus vivendi with the Zapatistas in Chiapas," he noted. "We also pretended they were real guerrillas with their wooden rifles. We created a liberated zone, and the army respected it, and it's still there. But it is a simulation -- the army could eliminate it in 90 seconds."

    And in yet another provocative comment on the theme, Casteneda suggested that somebody may already have arrived at a modus vivendi with the Sinaloa Cartel -- a suggestion that is getting big play in Mexican newspapers these days. "Why is it that of the 70,000 drug war prisoners in Mexico, only 800 are Chapo Guzman's men?" he asked. "Many people think the government has made a deal with the Sinaloa cartel. I don't know if it's true."

    The Mexican government was forced Wednesday to deny such claims, a clear sign they are getting wide circulation.

    Peruvian drug policy analyst Ricardo Soberon told the conference that while Latin America has been a loyal follower of the UN's and the US's prohibitionist drug policy discourses, it was time for something new. "The UN anti-drug paradigm is broken," he said. "We have to change the paradigm. We have to offer something other than prohibition and the criminal justice system, but what? A regulated market? What does that mean? What we need in any case are policies that are fundamentally based on human rights and deal with it from a public health viewpoint."

    Human rights and the drug war remained a key theme of the conference on its second day, with Luis Gonzalez Placencia, president of the Federal District (Mexico City) Commission on Human Rights, and Monte Alejandro Rubido, Subsecretary for Human Rights for the Secretariat of Public Security, speaking and being grilled by the audience.

    "The violent and militaristic policy against drugs generates more violence and has produced more dead," said Placencia. "We have to consider whether this anti-drug policy has become counterproductive," he added.

    But Rubido, a federal functionary, stood fast, saying the Calderon government remained firm in its commitment to keep drugs criminalized. Far from being a failure, the strategy is working, he said, to hoots and groans from the crowd. "It is achieving good results," he said.

    During a question and answer session that followed the pair, Rubido was raked over the coals by questioner after questioner, but remained stolidly unshakable in his support for current policy.

    "How many people has marijuana killed and how many has the policy of repression killed?" asked one conference-goer, but Rubido just smirked in silence.

    "People have consumed drugs forever," said Haydee Rosovsky, the former head of Mexico's national commission on addiction, from the floor, as she called out the bureaucrats. "You functionaries have to come out like Gaviria and Zedillo, and not wait until you are ex-functionaries."

    National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) researcher Luis Astorga presented graphs showing which party governs which Mexican states and which coastal and border municipalities and how they appear to be affiliated with different blocs of cartels. "The PRI governed states on the Gulf Coast are where the cocaine flows," he said, "and the PRI controls most border municipalities."

    That is the province of a bloc of cartels consisting of the Gulf (los Zetas) and Juarez cartels and the Beltra Leyva breakaway from the Sinaloa cartel, Astorga suggested, while taking pains to say his research is only "a work in progress." On the other hand, the ruling National Action Party (PAN) controls the northwest states of Baja California, Sonora, and Sinaloa, playground to the Sinaloa, and La Familia cartels, and breakaway factions of the Tijuana cartel. Echoing Casteneda, Astorga suggested it might be time for a "pax mafioso," although he admitted it would be difficult to find political cover for such a move.

    Ethan Nadelmann, head of the Drug Policy Alliance briefed the crowd on the US medical marijuana experience at event organizers' request, although he expressed bemusement at the issue's relevance to Mexico and its drug war and labored to make a useful connection.

    "Medical marijuana provided the angle of attack that broke the marijuana policy logjam in the United States," he noted. "What Mexico needs is to find some sort of similar issue, some sort of similar angle. Perhaps the best approach is to argue that by legalizing marijuana we can deprive the cartels of a significant income stream," he suggested.

    The Mexico City conference this week is just one more indication that the cracks in the wall of drug prohibition in Latin America are spreading. But while the drug reform movement in the hemisphere has some big names behind it, it is still going to take on the ground, grass roots organizing in countries across the hemisphere to move forward. The conference in Mexico City helped lay the groundwork for that, at least in Mexico.
    Read more of Phillip S. Smith's work at the Drug War Chronicle.



    © 2010 Drug War Chronicle All rights reserved.View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/145833/

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