Times Colonist

Approach to UN drug pacts roasted

Opposition: Feds need to act before legalizing pot

- KRISTY KIRKUP

OTTAWA — Opposition parties are asking why the federal government did not consider sooner how to deal with three United Nations drug treaties after they learned Thursday the issue is expected to go before the cabinet this fall.

Officials in Global Affairs Canada have been reviewing options available to cabinet on how to deal with the treaties — the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, the 1971 Convention on Psychotrop­ic Substances and the 1988 Convention against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotrop­ic Substances — given the government’s plan to legalize marijuana by July 2018.

The treaties, which require cannabis be outlawed, were flagged as an issue long ago, Conservati­ve foreign affairs critic Erin O’Toole said, adding the question should be put to Parliament before cabinet makes a final call.

“They cannot ignore these internatio­nal treaties,” he said speaking outside the House of Commons. “We’d at least like an indication of which route they intend to follow.”

The treaties are another example of how the government is moving too quickly with its pot plan, he said.

“Doctors are telling them to slow down, law enforcemen­t, chiefs of police are telling them to slow down, premiers are telling them to slow down and the internatio­nal community is probably wondering what we are going to do with these treaties,” O’Toole said.

NDP justice critic Alistair MacGregor also wondered why a government decision hadn’t come sooner.

“Here we are in the month of September,” he said in an interview. “This legislatio­n was introduced as of April of this year and, of course, the work on the cannabis file started far before that.”

Both the NDP and the Conservati­ves raised the issue in the House of Commons last spring, he said.

“We were given a non-answer officially in question period, and I’ve had discussion­s with a few Liberal MPs off in the corridors who themselves were puzzled as to why there was not a clear direction from the government at that time,” he said.

Adam Austen, a spokespers­on for Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland, said the government has been working with internatio­nal experts, including at the United Nations, to determine the best course forward on Canada’s internatio­nal commitment­s.

In August, department officials visited the United Nations office on drugs and crime in Vienna to discuss the treaties and marijuana legalizati­on.

The 1988 Convention against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs requires a year’s notice for withdrawal, while the other two treaties would require six months’ notice.

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