The Press

Clark gets global drug reform job

- LAURA WALTERS

"I believe that drug policy needs to evolve from a substance-based to a people-centered approach."

Former prime minister Helen Clark

Former prime minister Helen Clark will join one of the world’s leading drug policy reform think tanks, along with other former world leaders.

Clark, who last year lost her bid to become the next secretaryg­eneral of the United Nations, ended her second four-year term with the United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP) in April.

And yesterday she was announced as one of the new members of the Global Fund, which aims to reform drug policy in order to reduce societal harm.

Helen Clark will be working alongside former United Nations secretary general Kofi Annan, and prominent business people and cultural leaders.

‘‘I believe that drug policy needs to evolve from a substance based to a people-centred approach,’’ Clark said.

‘‘Harm reduction, prevention, and evidence-based treatment have shown their effectiven­ess around the world. I have witnessed this from New Zealand to Belarus. Now is the time to address the policy barriers to better outcomes.’’

The fund said the consensus on which the internatio­nal drug control regime was establishe­d more than fifty years ago was broken.

A growing number of national or local authoritie­s are moving away from a prohibitiv­e attitude towards drugs and experiment­ing with different ways of managing their presence in society.

The fund advocated for evidence-based drug reform, and was largely supportive of the legal regulation of substances, rather than criminalis­ation.

It also supported harm reduction interventi­ons and therapies tailored to meet the needs of those affected by drugs.

The fund’s first report, published in 2011, spoke of the negative consequenc­es of the socalled ‘‘war on drugs’’, saying priority should be given to health and safety and measures that helped communitie­s, rather than penalising people.

Its reports from 2012, 2013 and 2015 also looked at potential negative impacts of a punitive approach to drugs.

The fund stated the criminalis­ation of people who used drugs added to the spread of HIV/ AIDS and Hepatitis C. It also had an effect on access to palliative care and pain medication.

The NZ Drug Foundation said having Clark join the group was a ‘‘real coup’’.

The foundation’s executive director Ross Bell said the think tank had become well known for championin­g ‘‘cutting edge, health-focused approaches’’ to drug problems.

During her tenure at the United Nations Developmen­t Programme, there was a sea change of views on drug policy within the agency, he said.

At the UN’s general assembly meeting on the world drugs problem in April 2016 the UNDP criticised current internatio­nal drug policy, highlighti­ng the effects the approach was having on the world’s poor.

In 2013, Clark told Reuters there was no doubt from a health position we should treat the issue of drugs as primarily a health and social issue rather than a criminalis­ed issue.

Bell said that while her role would be globally focused, it was likely New Zealand would find ways to involve her in upcoming discussion­s on law reform.

The Labour-led government has said it would legalise medicinal cannabis, and hold a referendum on legalising cannabis for personal use, on or by the 2020 election.

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