The Phnom Penh Post

Malaysia proposes softening drug laws

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MALAYSIA has proposed removing criminal penalties for possession and use of drugs in small amounts, a move medical groups said will help addicts break a “cycle of imprisonme­nt and poverty”.

The Southeast Asian country currently has tough antidrugs laws – those caught with relatively small quantities of cannabis, heroin and cocaine may be charged with drug-traffickin­g and face the death penalty.

If narcotics are decriminal­ised, it would be a rare step in a region where many government­s hand down harsh punishment­s for drug-related crimes.

Health Minister Dzulkefly Ahmad announced the government was set to introduce the “significan­t game-changer policy” of decriminal­ising drugs.

The move is a crucial step “towards achieving a rational drug policy that puts science and public health before punishment and incarcerat­ion,” he said in a statement on Thursday.

“An addict shall be treated as a patient [not as a criminal], whose addiction is a disease we would like to cure.”

He insisted it did not mean that Malaysia was seeking to legalise drugs, and traffickin­g will remain a crime.

The policy is in the early stages and the minister did not give further details.

The announceme­nt was welcomed by dozens of NGOs and medical groups, including the Malaysian Medical Associatio­n and the Academy of Medicine Malaysia, who backed the “public health approach” to drug use.

“Criminalis­ation makes many drug users afraid to ask for medical help for fear of punishment and a criminal record,” they said in a joint statement, adding the current policy “creates a cycle of imprisonme­nt and poverty” for addicts.

Last week, Home Minister Muhyiddin Yassin said that most of t he 70,000 prisoners i n Malaysia were drug addicts.

It remains to be seen whether the government, a reformist alliance that took power last year, can push through such a controvers­ial change in a country where many are staunchly against drugs.

The government announced with great fanfare last year t hat it would abolish capita l punishment ent irely. But af ter a back lash, aut horities dropped t hat plan and now say only the mandator y death penalt y will be a xed.

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