The Manila Times

Mexico debates legalizing opium poppy for medicine

- AFP PHOTO AFP

MEXICO CITY: Fed up with drugrelate­d violence, a growing number of Mexican politician­s see one potential cure: legalizing the cultivatio­n of opium poppies for the production of medicine.

The debate has emerged in recent weeks after President Enrique Pena Nieto proposed legislatio­n in April to loosen marijuana laws by legalizing medical cannabis and easing restrictio­ns on its recreation­al use.

Since then, governors and congressio­nal lawmakers have voiced their support for regulating opium poppies, which are often grown by farmers in poor areas of the country and sold to cartels as the raw material for heroin.

The idea was launched by Hector Astudillo, governor of the southern state of Guerrero, which has the country’s highest murder rate amid turf wars among drug cartels battling for control of the mountains where US- bound heroin is born.

Astudillo, whose state is the biggest producer of opium poppies, proposed a pilot program for the crop’s cultivatio­n for medical uses.

Graco Ramirez, governor of the neighborin­g crime- plagued state of Morelos, which is a transit route for the drug, voiced his support.

“In (the northweste­rn state of) Sinaloa and Guerrero, growing opium poppies is a fact of life and we must take it away from the criminals and give it to health,” Ramirez said.

Government prepares bill?

Manuel Mondragon y Kalb, the national commission­er against drug addiction, said that his agency is “deeply studying the Opium poppies are often grown by farmers in poor areas of the country and sold to cartels as the raw material for heroin. use of opium gum as medicine, its transforma­tion into morphine and its derivative­s as painkiller­s.”

While Mondragon did not indicate whether the government was drafting some kind of legislatio­n, El Universal newspaper said Wednesday, citing presidency sources, that the government was working on a proposal to send to Congress by the end of the year.

Pena Nieto’s spokesman, Eduardo Sanchez, told AFP that he had “no idea about this informatio­n” in the newspaper while Health Minister Jose Narro told reporters that Congress must first focus on the marijuana bill.

One backer of such a measure, Senator Miguel Romo, of Pena Nieto’s centrist Institutio­nal Revolution­ary Party ( PRI), said opium poppies are regulated in “a very efficient way” in some countries where it is legal for medical uses, such as Spain.

Australia, France, Turkey, Hungary and India also grow opium poppies legally for the pharmaceut­ical industry under internatio­nal licenses.

Senator Roberto Gil, of the conservati­ve National Action Party, said that it “is stupid” that Mexico cannot use opium poppies for medical purposes when it is one of the world’s major producers of the crop.

Heroin too profitable

But for Raul Benitez Manaut, a security expert at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, such a measure would not reduce violence in Guerrero because the illegal heroin market in the United States will always be too lucrative for cartels to give it up.

“The profit from the illegal drug is much, much higher than any legal cultivatio­n, even if it is very profitable,” he told Agence France- Presse.

In January, a farmer told Agence France- Presse in an interview at his small opium poppy field that a parcel owner could sell a kilogram of opium gum for $ 925. A farmer hired to cut the bulbs to extract the sticky substance can make $16 per day, four times the minimum wage.

Between 15 and 25 kilograms of the raw material are needed to make just one kilogram of heroin, which drug dealers buy for around $50,000 in the United States.

Residents from poppy growing communitie­s in Guerrero joined a protest organized by taxi and truck drivers last month in the state’s capital, Chilpancin­go, which ended in violence with 71 people arrested.

Some of the protesters demanded that the army stop fumigating opium poppies.

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