Otago Daily Times

Drug policy changes ‘gamechange­r’ in wake of deaths

- JOHN GIBB

GOVERNMENT policy changes after a surge in synthetic drug deaths are a historic ‘‘gamechange­r’’, in that they are tough on commercial dealers of illicit drugs but compassion­ate towards users, Tuari Potiki says.

‘‘It’s a positive first step; it’s a significan­t step; it signals that this Government actually cares about people,’’ he said.

Mr Potiki, of Dunedin, chairs the New Zealand Drug Foundation board, is director of the University of Otago’s Office of Maori developmen­t and addressed a United Nations body on drug policy issues in 2016.

The policy changes included classifyin­g as class A two main synthetic drugs (5FADB and AMBFUBINAC­A) which had been linked to recent deaths.

This would give police the search and seizure powers needed to crack down on sup pliers and manufactur­ers, and Mr Potiki said that highlevel offenders could now face life imprisonme­nt.

Many synthetic drug users were from lower socioecono­mic groups, including homeless people, and he hailed the changed policy focus to emphasise the importance of drug addicts having access to addiction services. ‘‘We are very, very pleased.’’ This ‘‘wellbalanc­ed’’ approach included appropri ately increasing penalties and getting tough on commercial dealers in these drugs, which had caused more than 50 deaths in this country in recent years.

Illicit drug possession remained illegal but the new approach enabled the police to extend their existing discretion to ‘‘support the people at the bottom of the chain’’.

Putting such lowerlevel users in prison ‘‘didn’t fix anything — it doesn’t work’’.

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