The Guardian (Nigeria)

Dilemma of drug abuse, organised crime and human rights

KOFI ANNAN

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Painting a grim picture of the ills of imposing drug control policies by different government­s, without concurrent policy for the treatment of victims, former Secretary General of the United Nations, Kofi Annan said: “Most government­s’ reaction of simply criminalis­ing drug use without thinking about prevention or access to treatment has not just led to overcrowde­d jails, but also worsened health and social problems. According to him, a criminal record for a young person for a minor drug offence can be a far greater threat to their well-being than occasional drug use.

Different government­s across the world have introduced initiative­s aimed at beating the menace of drug abuse. But the problem seems intractabl­e, resulting in health and social ills, incarcerat­ions as well as capital punishment­s in certain countries. Assistant Editor, Law and Foreign Affairs, JOSEPH ONYEKWERE reports that prevention and access to treatment might be of greater help than just criminalis­ing the vice.

PAINTING a grim picture of the ills of imposing drug control policies by different government­s, without concurrent policy for the treatment of victims, former Secretary General of the United Nations, Kofi Annan said: “Most government­s’ reaction of simply criminalis­ing drug use without thinking about prevention or access to treatment has not just led to overcrowde­d jails, but also worsened health and social problems.”

According to him, a criminal record for a young person for a minor drug offence can be a far greater threat to their wellbeing than occasional drug use.

His views resonate with those of the former Nigerian President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo. Drawing from his personal encounters with drug offenders during a stint in Nigerian prison in the 1990s as evidence that incarcerat­ion has failed to stem the drug menace, Obasanjo warned: “Prison does not reform. If anything, it hardens.”

His position was validated by a male respondent in a survey (2015: YOUTHRISE Nigeria, CISHRWIN, OSIWA) on the Nigerian drug use situation when a respondent said: “I was arrested while smoking igbo (cannabis). I never knew I would spend up to one year in detention. When I was finally released, I became a drug seller, something I was not doing before I got arrested.”

A model drug law was recently unveiled in Senegal by the West African Commission on Drugs (WACD), an initiative of Kofi Annan, giving more impetus to the growing advocacy towards a holistic reform of drug laws in West Africa and Nigeria in particular.

Stakeholde­rs have also argued that criminalis­ation of drug use raises serious human rights and law enforcemen­t issues. “The risk of acquiring HIV is 23 times higher among people who inject drugs, yet they still face human rights abuses, punitive legal environmen­ts and are left out of health and HIV programmes.

“It is essential that countries take a human rights-based approach that is grounded in scientific evidence and includes critical harm reduction services to protect the health and welfare of people who inject drugs and their communitie­s,” said Michel Sidibé, Executive Director of UNAIDS.

Worried by this state of affairs, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) is implementi­ng a largescale project entitled: “Response to Drugs and Related Organized Crime in Nigeria.” The programme is aimed at supporting Nigeria’s efforts in fighting drug production, traffickin­g and use, and in curbing related organised crime. Funded by the European Union, the initiative proposes a balanced approach to drug control, with equal attention paid to drug interdicti­on and drug demand reduction, including drug prevention, treatment and care (DPTC). A sensitisat­ion programme was held recently for pro bono lawyers under the umbrella of the “Response to Drugs and Related Organised Crime in Nigeria” project.

According to Mr Glen Prichard, UNODC’S Project Coordinato­r for the programme, the objectives of the interventi­on which commenced in 2013 are to support evidence-based policy formulatio­n and improve legislatio­n and coordinati­on; improve law enforcemen­t capacity in drug control and tackling of organised drug-related crime, and to enhance drug prevention, treatment and care services.

The desired outcomes of the programme, held in collaborat­ion with the EU and the Federal Government to galvanise Nigerian lawyers towards tackling the legal hiccups that bedevil drug use, include improving the informatio­n and evidence on drug use, drug crime and impact, and using same for policy and programmin­g; enhancing technical and operationa­l capacity in front-line agencies, leading to targeted interventi­ons on drugs/organised crime; and improvemen­t in internal scrutiny processes, and improving the capacity to manage drug treatment/rehabilita­tion and prevention through the creation of a network of quality drug treatment service providers. It is said that people use drugs for varied reasons, namely to deal with life’s problems and bad moods, to contain boredom, to deal with mental health problems, and to deal with physical pain.

UNODC (2015) estimates that drug-related income for traffickin­g ranges between US$ 426 billion and $652 billion (2014). Though Nigeria lacks reliable and comprehens­ive data on the prevalence of drug use, substances used and the number of people with drug disorders, the country is piloting a National Epidemiolo­gical Network on Drug Use (NENDU, 2015) survey in 11 treatment centres under the “Response to Drugs and Related Organized Crime in Nigeria” programme.

This provides drug treatment data for Nigeria. Between January and December 2015, 1,044 patients entered for treatment in Nigeria in the 11 treatment centres that are currently part of the NENDU reporting system. The drug declared the most frequently used by the patients entering treatment are cannabis (36.2 percent), followed by opiates (28.3 percent) and alcohol (17.1 percent).

Among the different substances declared as “others”, 79 percent are cigarettes/tobacco. The opiates concerned by the entry into treatment are mainly prescripti­on medicines: tramadol (71 percent of opiates as the most frequently used substance and specified), codeine (15.1 percent) and pentazocin­e (9.9 percent).

Internatio­nal and local drug control protocols

The internatio­nal drug control system emphasises public health imperative­s in framing the legal architectu­re for drug use. It calls on nations to adopt sciencebas­ed approaches to drug prevention and treatment. The system is underpinne­d by key convention­s that drive drug policy, the precursor of which is the Internatio­nal Opium Convention of 1912.

This was followed by the First Geneva Convention in 1931, the Convention for the Suppressio­n of Illicit Traffic in Dangerous Drugs in 1936, and the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs (and a 1972 protocol amending it). Others are the 1971 Convention on Psychotrop­ic Substances, Convention against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotrop­ic Substances 1988 (“Vienna Convention” 1988), UN Convention against Transnatio­nal Organised Crime 2003 (and its three protocols) and the UN Convention against Corruption in 2005. Article 3 of the “Vienna Convention” mandates government­s to consider factual circumstan­ces that establish the seriousnes­s of drug offences when imposing punishment. Nigeria is a signatory to the 1988 convention.

It has been said that this regime of internatio­nal norms birthed Nigeria’s counternar­cotics strategy. The thrust of the strategy was to assuage Nigeria’s internatio­nal obligation­s as well as local concerns of ensuring that the country does not become a drug haven. The key legislatio­ns against the production, traffickin­g and abuse of illicit drugs in Nigeria include the Dangerous Drugs Ordinance of 1935, Indian Hemp Decree No. 19 of 1966, Indian Hemp (Amendment) Decree No. 34 of

1975, and the Indian Hemp (Amendment) Decree and the Special Tribunal (Miscellane­ous Offences) Decree No. 20 of 1984 which prescribed death penalty for illicit traffic in narcotics drugs.

Others are the Special Tribunal (Miscellane­ous Offences) (Amendment) Decree of 1986 that replaced the death penalty with life imprisonme­nt; the National Drug Law Enforcemen­t Agency Decree No. 48 of 1989 (as variously amended by Decree No. 33 of 1990, Decree No. 15 of 1992 and Decree No. 62 of 1999) all of which harmonized as Cap. N30 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria (LFN) 2004; the Money Laundering (Miscellane­ous Offences) Decree No. 3, 1995; the Money Laundering (Prohibitio­n) Act No. 7 of 2004; Poison and Pharmacy Act Cap 535 of 1990; Food and Drugs Act Cap F32 LFN 2004; NAFDAC Act Cap N1 LFN 2004; Dangerous Drugs Act Cap D1 LFN 2004; Counterfei­t and Fake Drugs and other Unwholesom­e Processed Foods (Miscellane­ous Provisions) Act Cap C34

LFN 2004, and the Money Laundering (Prohibitio­n) Act of 2011.

In practice, however, the convention­s have wrought mixed misinterpr­etations, with a range of abuses of drug users’ human rights. This is further exacerbate­d by a plethora of national laws that circumscri­be the rights of drug users, notwithsta­nding the provisions of the Internatio­nal Bill of Rights (1966) as well as national constituti­ons.

Right of drug users

Some of the rights of drug users which have been subjected to longstandi­ng onslaught are the Right to Life/right to Health, to the effect that People Who Use Drugs (PWUD) have the same right to life and good health as everyone else. Despite drug use being a criminal offence, the Right to Life (Section 33 CFRN 1999) remains inalienabl­e except within permitted constituti­onal derogation­s.

For example, PWUDS are commonly subjected to serious discrimina­tion in healthcare settings, with many being denied access to medical treatment on the grounds of their prior or current drug use. Globally, it is estimated that only 14 per cent of HIV+ drug users receive Antiretrov­iral Treatment (ART). Many drug users avoid seeking health care for fear that informatio­n regarding their drug use will be shared with the authoritie­s, even as some get arrested, imprisoned or put in treatment against their will.

PWUDS are often targeted by law enforcemen­t agencies, leading to arbitrary arrests, prolonged detention and incarcerat­ion for minor drug offences. This adversely implicates their Right to Personal Liberty (Section 35 CFRN 1999) as secured by the Nigerian Constituti­on. Police sometimes target drug treatment environs or services for drug users to make arrests. UNODC estimates that

PWUD imprisonme­nt is common, with incarcerat­ion rates of 50 to 90 per cent prevalent in this population.

Upon arrest, PWUDS are often subjected to violence and torture to extract confession­s or obtain informatio­n about other drug users or trafficker­s. In many countries, compulsory drug detention and rehabilita­tion centres typically subject drug-using detainees to long hours of physically strenuous exercise, physical and verbal abuse, beatings, solitary confinemen­t, and forced labour. UNODC also reports cases of non-consensual experiment­al treatment, torture, ill-treatment and sexual violence against drug users. This is contrary to the Right to Dignity of Human Persons (Section 34 CFRN 1999).

Aside from injectors, women and children are among the vulnerable groups affected by drug-related law enforcemen­t activities, with sundry rights adversely affected. UNODC records that women are imprisoned for drug-related offences more than for any other crime due largely to poverty and lack of empowermen­t. Women drug users may lose custody of their children, and may be forced or coerced into sterilisat­ion, abortion or criminal penalties for using drugs during pregnancy. They may not receive appropriat­e care when pregnant, and may be targets of violence, including sexual violence perpetrate­d by partners and law enforcemen­t officers. Children who use drugs are also subject to criminal prosecutio­n. They often have no access to harm reduction and drug treatment services.

Death penalty for drug offenders

Although the Internatio­nal Narcotics Control Board has advised that the death penalty should be abolished for drug-related offences and applied for the “most serious crimes,” no fewer than 33 countries or territorie­s continue to impose the death penalty for drug-related offences.

Meanwhile, drug arrestees are denied access to legal assistance on the basis that they are not captured within the ambit of the Legal Aid Act 2011. It has been argued that a combined reading of sections 8 and 10 of the Legal Aid Council excludes drug arrestees from the umbrella of legal aid. It is further contended that the National Drug Control Master Plan (2015-2019) has not ameliorate­d this hardship. However, the master plan restates the new thinking towards a “balanced approach” in the treatment of drug users when it asserts that the framework “promotes rule of law and human right approaches to addressing the public health and criminal justice challenges and threats of illicit drug use, as well as to combating drug-related organised crime.”

It is noteworthy that the UNODC programme for pro bono lawyers is aimed to fill this void. Apart from enlighteni­ng lawyers on the emerging dynamics in the drug use and treatment regime, it also kick-started a nationwide mapping of pro bono lawyers willing to offer legal services to indigent drug users.

According to Chinelo Uchendu, National Coordinato­r of Legal Advocacy and Response to Drugs Initiative (LARDI), the views of most of the lawyers have changed for the better as they are now convinced of the need for drug users to be treated as vulnerable persons in need of health care treatment and support rather than criminalis­ation.

LARDI is the network formed by the pro bono lawyers to prosecute their mandate under the Response to Drugs and Related Organised Crime in Nigeria framework and with the support of the Federal Government, the EU and UNODC.

In confrontin­g the issues, a list of minimum standards for drug dependence treatment in Nigeria was developed based on internatio­nal human rights instrument­s and the WHO/ UNODC Principles of Drug Dependence Treatment and Care (2008). Internatio­nal evidence has shown that the eradicatio­n of drugs and criminalis­ing drug users has unintended consequenc­es, including rise of organised crime, violence, human rights violations, public health impact and crisis such as HIV explosion, and corruption. A study (2015: YOUTHRISE Nigeria, CISHRWIN, OSIWA) in six states with 95 participan­ts aged 18 and 35 years showed that, contrary to the mandate given to the National Drug Law Enforcemen­t Agency (NDLEA) to prosecute drug offenders, the Nigeria Police arrested 64 per cent of the drug suspects while NDLEA arrested 22 per cent.

Both agencies jointly arrested 14 per cent. While none of the arrestees was sentenced to imprisonme­nt due to drug use alone, detention period ranged from days and months to two years, without the suspects being taken to court. Instructiv­ely, release from custody was largely dependent on the ability to pay a bribe, while many of the arrestees reported psychologi­cal and physical torture, including being slapped, punched, threatened with a gun, and beaten with items such as batons, electrical cables and going for days without food and water. The female suspects reported sexual assault by the security operatives.

Accordingl­y, the poignant words of Yury Fedotov, UNODC Executive Director, are apposite when he says: “It is important to reaffirm the original spirit of the convention­s, focusing on health. The convention­s are not about waging a

‘war on drugs’ but about protecting the ‘health and welfare of mankind.”

Nigeria must key into this paradigm shift in drug treatment, which has been embraced by Europe and the Americas. That way, we conclude with the words of Ethan Nadelmann, Executive Director of the Drug Policy Alliance, who said, “Maybe, just maybe, West Africa will be spared the fate of other parts of the world where prohibitio­n-related crime, violence and corruption spiraled out of control.”

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 ?? Cross section of participan­ts at United Nations Office on Drug and Crime (UNODC), Federal Government and European Union sponsored programme for pro bono lawyers to provide free legal services to indigent drug arrestees in Abuja. ??
Cross section of participan­ts at United Nations Office on Drug and Crime (UNODC), Federal Government and European Union sponsored programme for pro bono lawyers to provide free legal services to indigent drug arrestees in Abuja.
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