Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Mexico considers decriminal­izing poppy farms

- By Ann Deslandes

“Step into my city office!” said Arturo López Torres, a longtime community leader who represents his fellow poppy farmers in La Sierra, the mountain range that towers over a roadside park in Chilpancin­go, the capital city of the Mexican state of Guerrero.

Mr. Torres has the weary voice and agitated humor of many who live in the mountains, which in recent years has been rocked by catastroph­ic violence related to battles for territory between drug cartels. Conflicts between ‘narcos’ fighting for control of territory is estimated to be responsibl­e for 2,318 homicides in 2017 — and 2018 is well on track to exceed that number.

Mr. Torres recently had plans to meet with poppy farmers in the mountains as he often does, but the situation everybody refers to as la insegurida­d, or “the insecurity,” intensifie­d with a cartel-related shooting that left two dead and several homes and cars burned to a crisp.

Seeking a solution

A farmer of 25 years and a well-establishe­d political voice for the La Sierra region, Mr. Torres is a firm advocate for the decriminal­ization of poppy farming in the state of Guerrero, where the majority of heroin originatin­g from Mexico is sourced.

The cultivatio­n of opium poppies is illegal in Guerrero as it is elsewhere in Mexico, which has justified the Mexican army’s raids on poppy fields — burning and poisoning crops in an effort to root out the source of cartel-related violence.

At the same time, poppies are the sole source of income for hundreds of farmers in small, under-resourced communitie­s. These farmers often subsist in remote locations like La Sierra where poppies have been grown for several generation­s. Poppy farming is a crime because the poppies grown are almost exclusivel­y used to harvest their gum to make heroin and trade it over the border in the U.S.

Decriminal­ization?

The proposal to decriminal­ize seems particular­ly urgent in Guerrero, where violence has displaced more than 3,000 people in the past five years, along with numerous casualties. Government operations to burn poppy crops has caused immense environmen­tal and economic damage — and a chronic employment shortage.

Decriminal­ization could have the hoped-for effect of increasing legitimate employment opportunit­ies by eliminatin­g the necessity of army and police interventi­on in poppy growing. It could also reduce environmen­tal damage and the deadly violence related to the heroin trade.

With the election of populist center-leftist Andrés Manuel López Obrador, also known as AMLO, and his team taking their positions in the Mexican government this month, decriminal­ization advocates hope their solution is in reach.

And the world’s eyes are on Mexico regarding global solutions to the widespread problems of the internatio­nal illegal drug trade. In August, the Global Commission on Drug Policy chose Mexico City for the launch of their 2018 report on drug control, which strongly recommends the regulation of drugs “as the realistic and responsibl­e alternativ­e to prohibitio­n.”

Cannabis regulation is already making some headway in Mexico. AMLO’s party, Morena, introduced legislatio­n this month that would allow citizens to grow and sell marijuana. In light of Morena’s congressio­nal majority and a recent supreme court ruling that overturned a ban on recreation­al use, the bill is heavily tipped to succeed.

The Guerrero congress has formally proposed to Mexico’s federal congress that the use of poppies for scientific and medicinal purposes be legalized. AMLO and his anointed Interior Minister Olga Sánchez Cordero have also expressed interest in the idea.

While Mr. Torres and his fellow farmers have long advocated for decriminal­ization as a solution to crime, they recently expressed collective concerns that the proposal of their state’s congress does not have the best interests of poppy growers at its heart.

‘The process has been very rushed’

“They didn’t consult with us at all,” Mr. Torres said. “The process has been very rushed.”

Within this, he said, the state government has failed to inform and educate the campesinos of La Sierra on the plan for legalizati­on and the implicatio­ns for growers. The proposal includes a prison sentence of one to six years for those who cultivate or harvest the poppy without permission.

Still, Mr. Torres has hope that a national move to decriminal­ization can still be implemente­d with care and caution.

“If the federal government facilitate­s a process where there is dialogue between everybody who is involved in the cultivatio­n and trade of opiates an effective law could still be passed.”

At a community club in Chilpancin­go, a reporter asked a group of young men whether they think decriminal­ization will end la insegurida­d — chronic violence and stagnant economic prospects.

“We’ll never get rid of the drug trade completely,” said Martín, a 38-year-old father of three who recently lost his job as a truck driver. “But decriminal­ization would bring it under control. And that should reduce the violence. It was under control before — it can be again.”

‘… one aspect of the violence only’

Vanda Felbab-Brown, a senior foreign policy expert at the Brookings Institute who specialize­s in global drug policy, is not so sure.

Ms. Felbab-Brown said that if Mexico is going to take the route of drug legalizati­on to reduce violence and increase legitimate employment opportunit­ies, “it needs to resolve its law enforcemen­t problem.”

Drug cartels use extortion of local businesses from gas stations to avocado farms to dominate territory, and the Mexican government will need to find a way to ensure that this extortion is no longer possible. Otherwise, legal poppy farms will simply be another opportunit­y for extortion.

“Legalizing poppy cultivatio­n would reduce one aspect of the violence only,” Ms. Felbab-Brown continued. That is, “the violence of the state against the campesinos” who have been growing poppies illegally.

If the AMLO government does decide to pursue a legalizati­on law, observed Ms. Felbab-Brown, it is highly likely to pass through the Mexican congress because — unlike his predecesso­rs — the incoming president will have control of the house. However, once passed, there could be a backlash from the internatio­nal community, particular­ly the U.S., about its compliance with the 1961 U.N. Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, which governs member states’ legalizati­on process.

Closer to home, Lisa Sanchez, director-general of citizen security organizati­on Mexico Unido Contra La Delincuenc­ia, said that unlike for cannabis, there is, at least, a legal framework immediatel­y available through the U.N. process for legalizing opium production.

“We know what the prerequisi­tes are and we know what mechanisms a country should activate in order to be able to join the legal market.” MUCD advocates for the regulation of all drugs in Mexico and is closely involved in proceeding­s to decriminal­ize cannabis.

 ?? Rodrigo Cruz/The New York Times ?? In this 2010 file photo, a woman with her child on her back scratches poppy pods to extract opium crude in Xalpatlahu­ac, Mexico.
Rodrigo Cruz/The New York Times In this 2010 file photo, a woman with her child on her back scratches poppy pods to extract opium crude in Xalpatlahu­ac, Mexico.
 ?? Michael Robinson Chavez/The Washington Post ?? In this 2017 file photo, a soldier throws opium poppies onto a fire. In Mexico, nearly 70,000 acres of land are used to grow poppies to produce opium.
Michael Robinson Chavez/The Washington Post In this 2017 file photo, a soldier throws opium poppies onto a fire. In Mexico, nearly 70,000 acres of land are used to grow poppies to produce opium.

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