The Independent

It’s time for New Zealand to make the call on cannabis

- HELEN CLARK

This year, New Zealanders have the opportunit­y to turn their backs on the futile policy of trying to prohibit the use and supply of cannabis.

For decades, these activities have been criminalis­ed, blighting the future prospects of many and wasting public funding on the law and order system. In the 18 September referendum, New Zealanders can instead

vote for the Cannabis Legalisati­on and Control Bill which will end the prohibitio­nist approach and enable effective regulation of cannabis.

I urge all New Zealanders, including those living overseas, to check that they are registered to vote and to ensure they take this once in a generation opportunit­y to vote for sensible law.

Clearly, the prospect of invoking criminal sanctions has had little impact on people’s behaviour with respect to cannabis. Evidence from longitudin­al studies carried out in New Zealand indicates that by the age of 25, 80 per cent of New Zealanders will have tried cannabis at least once. Yet cannabis remains an illegal drug and prosecutio­ns continue.

Let us stop all that: stop wasting taxpayer money on the police, the prosecutor­s, the courts and the jails, and stop hounding ordinary citizens who are using cannabis for recreation rather than, say, a glass of wine or a cigarette.

Current practice in the law and order system with respect to drugs is unjust to the Maori people

Tobacco smoking – a highly addictive and dangerous habit – has been in decline in New Zealand since the Smoke-free Environmen­ts Act was adopted 30 years ago this month. Yet nobody was ever sent to jail for smoking tobacco. Rather, health promotion measures, including fiscal disincenti­ves, did the hard work. If cannabis can now be legalised, a similar health promotion approach will be part of the regime placed around it.

This approach, while innovative, has been implemente­d in many different settings. The legalisati­on of cannabis has been approved in Canada, Uruguay and 11 US states. This trend will reach western Europe in the coming months with the legalisati­on for recreation­al use in Luxembourg, along with intensive debates in Malta and Portugal. Outside of Europe, Mexico and Israel are on the starting block of legalisati­on. Moreover, partial legalisati­on models focusing on regulated production are being put in place in Australia’s Capital Territory (Canberra and surroundin­g towns), as well as several Swiss and Dutch cities.

Without legalisati­on, major ethnic disparitie­s in arrests, prosecutio­ns and conviction­s related to cannabis are also likely to persist. Current practice in the law and order system with respect to drugs is profoundly unjust to the Maori people. They bear a disproport­ionate burden of the prosecutio­ns, conviction­s and custodial sentences handed down for drug-related offending. Maori make up around 15 per cent of the population. Yet Maori aged 17 to 25 make up 37 per cent of all conviction­s for drug possession. The current government is keen to reduce the numbers of prisoners in New Zealand, and within that total to reduce the proportion of Maori incarcerat­ed, to reflect their proportion of the population. Drug law reform, including the legalisati­on of cannabis, helps meet both those objectives.

Put simply, prohibitio­n-based policy approaches have not eradicated and will not eradicate cannabis consumptio­n and supply in New Zealand or anywhere else where its use is establishe­d.

The time has come for New Zealand to face up to the reality of the widespread use and supply of cannabis in the country, and to legalise it and regulate it accordingl­y. No useful purpose is served by maintainin­g its illegal status.

Helen Clark is former prime minister of New Zealand, former administra­tor of the United Nations Developmen­t Programme, and a member of the Global Commission on Drug Policy

This is an edited version of comments to be delivered today on a live Global Commission on Drug Policy panel

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 ??  ?? Ethnic disparitie­s in arrests will continue as long as the drug is illegal (Getty)
Ethnic disparitie­s in arrests will continue as long as the drug is illegal (Getty)

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