Financial Times
11 July, 2014
Harm reduction: time to end the war on drugs?
By Clive Cookson
Georgia's policy is a striking example of an approach to drug abuse based on
scientific evidence and what's best for public health rather than harsh
criminal justice
Two years ago 24,000 people were in jail in the former Soviet republic of
Georgia. Today the figure is 10,000. The reduction - achieved through an
amnesty and an end to jail sentences for personal drug possession and other
minor offences - is one of the fastest falls in prison population on record,
apart from mass releases in war or revolution.
Archil Talakvadze, Georgia's Deputy Minister of Corrections, speaks of the
change of policy as a striking example - still little known abroad - of an
approach to drug abuse based on scientific evidence and what's best for
public health rather than harsh criminal justice.
"We had a repressive approach that led to one of the world's highest
incarceration rates, prison overcrowding and infections running out of
control," says Talakvadze, who comes from a health background. "Now we think
about 'harm reduction' to balance law enforcement."
The new policy has not led to an increase in crime as some feared, he says.
But it has had a very positive effect on health, including a fall in the
annual prison death rate from 55 per 10,000 prisoners to 25. It has also
helped to tackle the spread of hepatitis C through infected drug-injecting
needles.
Other authorities on drug policy echo Talakvadze's appeal for an end to the
war on drugs. "This is where the gap between what science tells us we should
do and what actually happens on the ground is greatest," says Michel
Kazatchkine, the UN Secretary-General's Special Envoy on HIV/Aids in eastern
Europe and Central Asia.
In March 2016 the UN General Assembly will hold a special session on drugs,
the first for 20 years - and Kazatchkine predicts "big political fights".
"The Secretary-General has called for a very open debate," he says. "I'm
arguing for the prioritisation of health and an end to criminalisation when
people have drugs with no intention to sell."
In the US, where the movement to decriminalise cannabis is growing, the
National Institute on Drug Abuse (Nida) is gathering evidence about its
effects. "We're investing in research into what's happening in Colorado and
Washington [state]," says deputy director Wilson Compton.
American prisons, too, are full of people held for drug offences.
"Addiction is a public health crisis," Compton says. "Exceptionally high
rates of incarceration for drug-related offences have not been implemented
with corresponding increases in addiction treatment."
Photograph: Getty
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FW: Harm reduction: time to end the war on drugs? #drugpolicy
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About Mark Haden
Mark Haden currently works for Vancouver Coastal Health, Addiction Services, and has worked in detox, methadone and outpatient settings in both counseling and supervisory roles for over 20 years. Mark is a pivotal voice in the drug policy reform movement, providing viable, coherent models for reforming drug education and regulating markets for currently illegal substances.
Mark's listserv has become an invaluable hub of information about drug policy and reform efforts. This blog will serve as an archive for future mailings.
Mark's listserv has become an invaluable hub of information about drug policy and reform efforts. This blog will serve as an archive for future mailings.
Visit Mark's personal website here: www.MarkHaden.com
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