NARCOTICS: America’s Drug War 🇺🇸 Is Ruining the World

We live in a time of change, when people are questioning old assumptions and seeking new directions. In the ongoing debate over health care, social justice, and border security, there is, however, one overlooked issue that should be at the top of everyone’s agenda, from democratic socialists to libertarian Republicans: America’s longest war. No, not the one in Afghanistan. I mean the drug war.

« The End of Drug Prohibition

As the global prohibition effort enters its second century, we are witnessing two countervailing trends. The very idea of a prohibition regime has reached a crescendo of dead-end violence not just in Afghanistan but recently in Southeast Asia, demonstrating the failure of the drug war’s repression strategy. In 2003, Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra launched a campaign against methamphetamine abuse that prompted his police to carry out 2,275 extrajudicial killings in just three months. Carrying that coercive logic to its ultimate conclusion, on his first day as Philippine president in 2016, Rodrigo Duterte ordered an attack on drug trafficking that has since yielded 1.3 million surrenders by dealers and users, 86,000 arrests, and some 20,000 bodies dumped on city streets across the country. Yet drug use remains deeply rooted in the slums of Bangkok and Manila.

On the other side of history’s ledger, the harm-reduction movement led by medical practitioners and community activists worldwide is slowly working to unravel the global prohibition regime. With a 1996 ballot measure, California voters, for instance, started a trend by legalizing medical-marijuana sales. By 2018, Oklahoma became the 30th state to legalize medical cannabis. After initiatives by Colorado and Washington in 2012, eight more states have decriminalized the recreational use of cannabis, long the most widespread of illicit drugs.

Hit by a surge of heroin abuse during the 1980s, Portugal’s government first reacted with repression that, as everywhere else on the planet, did little to stanch rising drug abuse, crime, and infection. Gradually, a network of medical professionals across the country adopted harm-reduction measures that would provide a striking record of proven success. After two decades of this ad hoc trial, in 2001, Portugal decriminalized the possession of all illegal drugs, replacing incarceration with counseling and producing a sustained drop in HIV and hepatitis infections.  »

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PHILIPPINES 🇵🇭: 6 dead in Bulacan, Nueva Ecija drug war

MANILA, Philippines — Four drug suspects were killed in police operations in Bulacan and two others in Nueva Ecija in the past two days.

Col. Chito Bersaluna, Bulacan police director, said Renato Piano, alias Intoy, resisted arrest and shot it out with anti-narcotics agents in a sting in Barangay San Rafael, San Jose del Monte on Monday night.

Renato Gonzales, alias Totoy, and Rommel Candule, alias Boknoy, were killed in alleged shootouts with police officers in Barangay Poblacion, Sta. Maria and a certain Glen Paguntalan in Ulingao-Barangca, San Rafael.

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ARABIE SAOUDITE 🇸🇦: libèration d’une Nigériane arrêtée pour « trafic de drogue »

L’étudiante était accusée de trafic de 2 000 paquets de Tramadol enveloppés dans un sac abandonné à l’aéroport, et sur lequel était orthographié son nom.

L’agence chargée de la lutte contre le trafic de drogue au Nigeria, la NDLEA, a déclaré récemment avoir démantelé un gang dont la spécialité était de planquer de la drogue dans les bagages des voyageurs.

LIRE

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