The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on drug policy: rethink it without taboos

- Editorial

Much of the harm caused by illegal drugs is caused by their illegality. Prohibitio­n helps to turn users into criminals, and the justice system is poorly equipped to help addicts recover. This is not a controvers­ial opinion in the fields of public health and policing – services on the frontline of the problem – but it is far from orthodoxy in Westminste­r.

Many politician­s still yield to taboos around liberal drug laws, even as social norms change and the failure of punitive methods becomes harder to ignore.

So it is heartening that a cross-party group of MPs has taken a significan­t step towards a more informed debate. The report by the Commons health and social care committee starts from the premise that addicts are not wicked people and that resources are most efficientl­y deployed aiding their recovery. Public Health England, a government agency, estimates that every £1 spent on drug and alcohol treatment saves £4 from the expense that untreated addiction causes.

A shift away from criminalis­ation does not have to absolve addicts of responsibi­lity. Crimes committed in pursuit of a fix cannot be excused. Victims are no less entitled to justice. Leniency

at the retail end of the market could empower gangsters higher up the drug supply chain where serious violent offences abound. In theory, police resources could be retargeted at the big players. In practice, a more tolerant drug policy environmen­t could legitimise use and boost demand – for which villains provide the supply.

A compassion­ate attitude towards people whose lives are ruined by drugs is not the same as a permissive attitude to recreation­al use, although the two issues can be hard to separate. The committee’s focus is not on the lucky dabblers who escape from drug experiment­ation unscathed. Their experience is often a function of social privilege. Affluent white users enjoy a tacit licence to flirt with drugs that is not available to black men, who are likelier to face the stiffest penalties.

But unequal applicatio­n of the law is a problem distinct from the immediate emergency: an epidemic of drugrelate­d deaths. In England, there were 2,670 deaths directly attributab­le to drugs last year – up 16% from 2017. The committee notes that the figure would be much higher if fatalities where drugs are a secondary factor were included.

Few European countries have a worse record and some have pioneered policies that divert drug users away from the police. Initial controvers­y around Portuguese decriminal­isation, for example, has given way to a political consensus in favour. Likewise an experiment in prioritisi­ng rehabilita­tion in Frankfurt saw a measurable fall in drugrelate­d crime compared with neighbouri­ng regions. But Frankfurt’s efforts were well-funded. In the UK many addicts rely on programmes dependent on shrunken public health budgets. Treatment services have faced cuts of 27% over the past three years. Poor resourcing provokes a costly vicious cycle: drug users turn to crime; criminalit­y hardens users.

It is easier to find faults with prohibitio­n than to design a better model. But there is now a compelling case to treat drug use as a public health problem, not a mess for the police to clear up. MPs are understand­ably cautious about decriminal­isation of possession for personal use. The Commons committee recommends only that government consult on the matter. It is the right question for politician­s to be asking, and vital that they keep an open mind when looking for answers.

 ??  ?? Part of a haul of cocaine seized in Southampto­n in 2011. Photograph: John Nguyen/REX/Shuttersto­ck
Part of a haul of cocaine seized in Southampto­n in 2011. Photograph: John Nguyen/REX/Shuttersto­ck

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