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Wednesday, 09/10/2014 11:16:18 AM

Wednesday, September 10, 2014 11:16:18 AM

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Global Commission Calls For Decriminalization Of Marijuana

Posted on: September 9, 2014

http://www.livetradingnews.com/global-commission-calls-decriminalization-marijuana-70458.htm#.VBBqNqGm0vl



A report released Tuesday by the Global Commission on Drug Policy calls on governments around the world to legalize Marijuana, and decriminalize drug use.

Members of the commission, including former Secretary General of the United Nations Kofi Annan, former Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo, former US Federal Reserve Chair Paul Volcker and Virgin Group founder Richard Branson, call for drug policies shaped by a greater emphasis on public health, as well as alternatives to incarceration for nonviolent drug crimes.

The participitants say it is time to permit the legal regulation in all countries of psychoactive substances like Marijuana and Coca leaf.

“The import of the Commission’s report lies in both the distinction of its members and the boldness of their recommendations,” said Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, a partner organization of the commission reported. “The former presidents and other Commission members pull no punches in insisting that national and global drug control policies reject the failed prohibitionist policies of the 20th century in favor of new policies grounded in science, compassion, health and human rights.”

An excerpt from the report’s Executive Summary reads, as follows;

The Commissioners call for an end to the criminalization and incarceration of users together with targeted prevention, harm reduction and treatment strategies for dependent users.

In order to reduce drug related harms and undermine the power and profits of organized crime, the Commission recommends that governments regulate drug markets and adapt their enforcement strategies to target the most violent and disruptive criminal groups rather than punish low level players. The Global Commission’s proposals are complementary and comprehensive. They call on governments to rethink the problem, do what can and should be done immediately, and not to shy away from the transformative potential of responsible regulation.

Members of the commission met Tuesday in New York City to discuss the report at a press conference.

The report was released ahead of the UN General Assembly Special Session (UNGASS) on Drugs, scheduled in Y 2016.

Members of the commission say they hope the UN will take their report’s recommendations into consideration in reshaping global drug policy.

The report’s Executive Summary summarizes the group’s recommendations for internatinal drug policy reform, as follows;

1. Putting health and community safety 1st requires a fundamental reorientation of policy priorities and resources, from failed punitive enforcement to proven health and social interventions.

2. Ensure equitable access to essential medicines, in particular opiate-based medications for pain.

3. Stop criminalizing people for drug use and Marijuana possession, and stop imposing “compulsory treatment” on people whose only offense is drug use or possession.

4. Rely on alternatives to incarceration for non-violent, low-level participants in illicit drug markets such as farmers, couriers and others involved in the production, transport and sale of illicit drugs.

5. Focus on reducing the power of criminal organizations as well as the violence and insecurity that result from their competition with both one another and the state.

6. Allow and encourage diverse experiments in legally regulating markets in currently illicit drugs, beginning with but not limited to Marijuana, Coca leaf and certain novel psychoactive substances.

7. Take advantage of the opportunity presented by the upcoming UNGASS in Y 2016 to reform the global drug policy regime.

“Ultimately, the global drug control regime must be reformed to permit legal regulation,” said former Brazilian President Fernando Henrique Cardoso in a statement on the report. “Let’s start by treating drug addiction as a health issue, rather than as a crime, and by reducing drug demand through proven educational initiatives. But let’s also allow and encourage countries to carefully test models of responsible legal regulation as a means to undermine the power of organized crime, which thrives on illicit drug trafficking.”

The report comes as traditional punitive Marijuana and other drug policies around the world are already being reconsidered and reshaped.

In Y 2013, Uruguay became the 1st country in the world to approve the legal regulation of the production, distribution and sale of Marijuana.

The US federal government continues to ban Marijuana, but in Colorado and Washington State programs are in place that legalize the recreational use of the drug.

Twenty-three other US states and Washington DC have legalized Marijuana for medical use, and many more states are expected to consider legalization in some form in the coming years.

“We can’t go on pretending the war on drugs is working,” Mr. Branson said in a statement about the commission’s report. “We need our leaders to look at alternative, fact-based approaches. Much can be learned from successes and failures in regulating alcohol, tobacco or pharmaceutical drugs. The risks associated with drug use increase, sometimes dramatically, when they are produced, sold and consumed in an unregulated criminal environment. The most effective way to advance the goals of public health and safety is to get drugs under control through responsible legal regulation.”

“There’s no question now that the genie of reform has escaped the prohibitionist bottle,” Mr. Nadelmann, a member of the commission’s “expert review panel,” said in an interview. “I’m grateful to the Commission for the pivotal role it has played in taking drug policy reform from the fringes of international politics to the mainstream.”

This is an on going story.

Stay tuned…

HeffX-LTN

Paul Ebeling