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Category Archives: War On Drugs
ABS-CBN report on drug war victims wins plum Asia journalism prize – ABS-CBN News
Posted: June 15, 2017 at 9:41 pm
Regina Reyes, head of ABS-CBN Integrated News and Current Affairs receives the SOPA 2017 award for Excellence in Human Rights Reporting.
MANILA (UPDATE) - ABS-CBN News' six-part series on victims of the war on drugs in the Philippines took home the award for Excellence in Human Rights Reporting at the Society of Publishers in Asia's (SOPA) 2017 Awards for Editorial Excellence.
The ABS-CBN Investigative and Research Group's War On Drugs: The Unheard Voices bested entries from Channel News Asia and humanitarian news agency IRIN.
The report, developed for the web by ABS-CBN News Digital Media's multimedia unit, tells the stories of slain drug suspects and the families they left behind. It was published on October 27, 2016 on news.abs-cbn.com.
ABS-CBN Integrated News and Current Affairs head Regina Reyes received the prize during the SOPA Awards Gala Dinner at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre Thursday night.
The series also received Honorable Mention for Excellence in Investigative Reporting.
SOPA was founded in 1982 to champion freedom of the press, promote excellence in journalism and endorse best practices for all local and regional publishing platforms in the Asia Pacific region, according to the organization.
It is a not-for-profit organization based in Hong Kong and representing international, regional and local media companies across Asia.
The annual SOPA Awards for Editorial Excellence serve as the world-class benchmark for quality journalism in the region, organizers said.
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8 arrested in police raids across Merseyside in war on drugs – Liverpool Echo
Posted: at 7:48 am
Homes have been raided this morning as part of a Merseyside Police operation targeting serious organised crime.
A convoy of police vans left the force's Canning Place HQ after a morning briefing over the suspected drugs network that is the focus of today's raids.
The crackdown comes after six nights of 'disruption activity', sparked by a spate of shootings, has been carried out by the force. More than 50 people have been arrested and knives, drugs and suspected stolen bikes have been seized.
Roadside checks have stopped suspicious vehicles in Toxteth, Speke and Bootle while open land searches have also taken place as officers hunt for weapons.
Just last night a gunman, thought to have been riding a scrambler bike, f ired three shots in a Litherland street. The incident left two vehicles damaged and was the eighth shooting in 15 days on Merseyside. Other gun incidents in that period included the fatal shooting of Yusuf Sonko in Toxteth and injury shootings in Speke, Kirkby, Seaforth and Fazakerley.
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8 arrested in police raids across Merseyside in war on drugs - Liverpool Echo
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Today’s Song: The War on Drugs Walk into Light with Holding On – Atwood Magazine (blog)
Posted: at 7:48 am
Indie rock band The War On Drugs is known for a very distinct sound. The all-enveloping, larger-than-life tracks in the bands repertoire hold a certain, unique emotion, falling somewhere between appreciation and wonder. Each long-lived guitar solo and hazy instrumental interlude fits like a puzzle piece in nearly every situation, giving the band an incredible strength when it comes to creating a memorable soundtrack. Their latest single release, Holding On, is no exception.
Perfectly cohesive with the bands previous album release, Lost In The Dream, Holding On stands for a new chapter in a very parallel world of depth and fluid musicality.
Much of the bands work can be considered musically multi-dimensional, many times feeling incredibly dense and thought-provoking. Holding On though, while comparative to any track in the bands past release, feels different in overall tone. The track screams with a new lightness, reminiscent of an upbeat summer drive rather than a reflective summer night.
A Deeper Understanding The War on Drugs
Held together by a contagious, sporadic drum beat, the track is energetic and fun. A playful keyboard and guitar add elements that make the track truly multi-dimensional, lyrical aspects falling on top of an already complete, nearly perfect combination of advanced instrumentals. The heartbroken ode tells the full story of a love built and lost, ending in the simple uplifting yet heartbreaking statement heart of hope.
Holding On captures everything there is to love about The War On Drugs. The band conquers an individualistic creativity responsible for a disconnected, yet perfectly packaged sound in every song. The elements of dreaminess hold a psychedelic element comparative to 70s rock while staying completely modern and understandable in todays rock music world. In Holding On, a less-improvised track, the band proves they can hold a unique individuality while still creating a track coherent enough to make the rock charts.
The War on Drugs Shawn Brackbill
The track can lead listeners to believe the bands upcoming album, A Deeper Understanding, to be released August 25 via Atlantic Records, will be a swift follow-up to Lost In The Dream.
The band released a single titled Thinking Of A Place just weeks before Holding On, which falls into the bands deeper, most complex side. It holds a slower tempo, encouraging in-depth internalization of emotions rather than the manifestation of something new. The two tracks, while similar in instrumental makeup, beautifully represent the multiple personalities of The War On Drugs incredible complexity. While the songs hold different audible emotions, they play well together, hyping the combinations to come on the bands unreleased collection.
cover Shawn Brackbill
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Today's Song: The War on Drugs Walk into Light with Holding On - Atwood Magazine (blog)
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The War On Drugs share the video for ‘Holding On’ – DIY Magazine
Posted: at 7:48 am
The War On Drugs are back and are set to release their fourth full-length album A Deeper Understanding on 25th August.
Theyd already shared its lead single, Holding On, and now its got a new video, which stars Frankie Faison (best known from The Wire) alongside Adam Granduciel, and directed by Brett Haley. Adding to that star line-up is Krysten Ritter (aka Jessica Jones), who provided the concept.
Its a heart-warming clip where Frankie plays a man who returns to his town after a long absence. There, hes greeted warmly by his neighbours, who are glad to see him out and about.
In November, The War On Drugs are set to go on a tour of the UK as part of a wider run, and two shows in Glasgow and Manchester have already sold out. Tickets are on sale for their other dates though!
Watch the video for Holding On and see all of The War On Drugs upcoming UK tour dates below.
NOVEMBER
09 Glasgow, Barrowlands 10 Glasgow, Barrowlands (sold out) 12 Manchester, O2 Apollo (sold out) 13 Manchester, O2 Apollo 14 London, Alexandra Palace
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The War On Drugs share the video for 'Holding On' - DIY Magazine
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Jeff Sessions continues his obsession with a war on drugs, this time targeting medical marijuana – Daily Kos
Posted: June 14, 2017 at 4:45 am
Jeff Sessions recently asked Congress to allow him to be able to prosecute medical marijuana providers, even though there are federal protections prohibiting that exact thing.
Heres what we know about Jeff Sessions: hes absolutely hell-bent on moving forward with a war on drugsdespite a lack ofevidence that itslinked to an uptick in crime and the fact that its incredibly unpopular with the American people. Sessions is particularly obsessed with marijuana, so much so that he has now asked Congress to allow him to prosecute medical marijuana providers, even though there are federal protections to prohibit the Justice Department from doing exactly that whichhave been in place since 2014.
The protections, known as the Rohrabacher-Farr amendment,prohibit the Justice Departmentfrom using federal funds to prevent certain states "from implementing their own State laws that authorize the use, distribution, possession or cultivation of medical marijuana." [...]
Sessions argued that the amendment would "inhibit [the Justice Department's] authority to enforce the Controlled Substances Act." He continues:I believe it would be unwise for Congress to restrict the discretion of the Department to fund particular prosecutions, particularly in the midst of an historic drug epidemic and potentially long-term uptick in violent crime. The Department must be in a position to use all laws available to combat the transnational drug organizations and dangerous drug traffickers who threaten American lives.
Lets get really clear on what Sessions is attempting to dohere. He is justifying his rabid obsession with drugs and locking up people of color by appealing to his fellow conservatives and their senseoflaw and order. Except none of this is based in any reality. The historic drug epidemic to which he refers is actually not an epidemic of marijuana abuse but instead of opioid abuse. The opioid epidemic is disproportionately affecting white America, and there is new research to suggest that its hitting nearly all age groups in rural and urban areas. This is a massive crisis. And there is no evidence whatsoever that focusing on medical marijuana will yield any kind of success in eliminating drug use in this country. Of course, it all depends on how one defines success. If you are defining success as the reduction of drug abuse and overdosesthen no, this absolutely will not work. But if your version of success is criminalizing marijuana, which we know sends more black and brown folks to prison and for longer, harsher sentences than it does white people (regardless of the fact that both blacks and whitesuse the drug at equal rates)then this plan is a home run.
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Thousands killed in Philippines since Duterte’s war on drugs began – TRT World
Posted: at 4:45 am
Many small-time users and dealers have been killed in the Philippines since Duterte took office on June 30. Police say about one-third of the victims were shot by officers in self-defence during legitimate operations.
Photo by: Reuters
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte speaks during a meeting with soldiers at Camp Capinpin in Tanay, in this file photo.
Human rights groups say around 9,000 people have been killed in the Philippines since President Duterte announced his war on drugs last year.
They were killed during police drugraids or by unidentified assailants.
More recently, senior officials such as police officers and politicians believed to be involved in drug trafficking, have also been targeted.
Many areas where drug dealing was rife have now become safe.
TRT World's Asia Reporter Shamim Chowdhury reports from the country's capital, Manila.
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‘War on drugs’ is costing thousands of lives | Guest columns … – Arizona Daily Sun
Posted: at 4:45 am
The following editorial appeared in The Orange County Register on Friday, June 9:
While American foreign policy has for years fixated on the conflict in Syria and the Middle East, just across the border in Mexico and throughout Central America tens of thousands of people lost their lives last year because of the conflict between drug cartels competing to deliver illicit drugs into the United States.
According to a recent report from the International Institute for Strategic Studies, whereas approximately 50,000 lives were lost in Syria last year, approximately 39,000 were killed in Mexico, Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador, much of which is attributable to drug-war violence.
Mexicos homicide total of 23,000 for 2016 is second only to Syrias, and is only the latest development in a conflict that stretches back to 2006, when President Felipe Calderon deployed the military to combat drug cartels.
Although the exact number of people killed because of the drug war in Mexico is unlikely to ever be known, a recent report from the Congressional Research Service cited estimates from 80,000 to more than 100,000 in that country alone.
The cause of this violence is obvious, and it is a direct, predictable consequence of our failed policy of drug prohibition. In the near-half century since President Richard Nixon declared a war on drugs, hundreds of thousands of Latin Americans have been killed in conflicts fueled by a lucrative illicit drug trade made possible by our prohibition of drugs.
This is an insight a certain New York developer possessed 27 years ago. Were losing badly the war on drugs, Donald Trump said in 1990. You have to legalize drugs to win that war. You have to take the profit away from these drug czars.
While Trump may have since lost this insight, the fact remains that the war on drugs does more harm than drugs themselves.
Last year, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos used his Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech to call for a rethink of the drug war, which contributed to decades of conflict in Colombia that killed hundreds of thousands.
Rather than squander more lives and resources fighting a War on Drugs that cannot be won including in our inner cities the United States must recognize the futility and harm of its drug policies.
The following editorial appeared in The News & Observer on Monday, June 5:
Presidents are measured by their responses to crises. And in his response to Saturdays terror attack in London, President Donald Trump came up small.
In a moment that called for sympathy and support, the president instead launched a storm of petty and peevish tweets. In one, he criticized the mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, a liberal Muslim with whom the president has had an ongoing feud. Trump tweeted: At least 7 dead and 48 wounded in terror attack and Mayor of London says there is no reason to be alarmed.
Khan was indeed trying to calm his city, but Trumps implication that the mayor viewed the horrific event as no reason to be alarmed was a gross manipulation of what the mayor said and did. The mayor told the BBC that he was appalled and furious that these cowardly terrorists would target innocent people and promised, we will never let them win, nor will we allow them to cower our city.
Once again, Trump simply lost control and blasted away on Twitter without measuring his words.
He even used the tragedy to huff and puff about how we must stop being politically correct and get down to the business of security for our people. He added later, We need to be smart, vigilant and tough. We need the courts to give us back our rights. We need the Travel Ban as an extra level of security.
Oh, yes, the travel ban the one aimed at six predominantly Muslim countries thats been repudiated in U.S. courts.
If only had Trump stopped with the one tweet that was appropriate: Whatever the United States can do to help out in London and the U.K. we will be there. But he didnt.
This attack of course prompts heightened concern worldwide, and should. And it will undoubtedly focus attention on a need for the civilized nations of the world to redouble anti-terrorism efforts, although theyve never backed down from concentrating on that ongoing crisis.
Trump is in a position to lead that anti-terrorism campaign, but when he politicizes a horrible tragedy such as this to push for his travel ban, he weakens himself. Rather, he should focus on working with other countries in a position to help the United States root out terrorist cells and destroy them forever. That will take cooperation with allies and it will be accomplished with diplomacy, not the kind of bullying rhetoric to which Trump seems addicted.
The following editorial appeared in the Star Tribune on Tuesday, June 6:
Competition from the global exchange of goods and services benefits consumers and countries, while unfair competition penalizes those who play by the rules and erodes confidence in the rules themselves. Thats why its essential that international agreements governing free trade are upheld.
Accordingly, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Secretary of Transportation Elaine Chao should heed members of Congress urging the U.S. government to enforce the Open Skies agreement with Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.
This bipartisan congressional consensus alleges that three airlines from those nations Qatar Airways, Etihad Airways and Emirates benefit from government subsidies worth more than $50 billion, which the congressional members and U.S.-based carriers such as Delta Air Lines believe give the airlines an unquestioned and unfair advantage that threatens the global aviation system and with it good-paying jobs here in the U.S.
In fact, according to an analysis from the Partnership for Open and Fair Skies, which includes Delta, American and United as well as several key airline-sector unions, every daily long-haul, round-trip flight lost to a Gulf carrier due to subsidized competition results in a net loss of 1,500 U.S. jobs.
According to the partnership, from 2011-2016 the Gulf carriers grew capacity at a rate more than six times the global GDP growth rate, suggesting that the subsidies are taking passengers from airlines based in nations working within the Open Skies framework. And the danger of overreliance on these Gulf carriers was clear when Mondays Mideast diplomatic spat between Qatar and five nations disrupted air travel.
Some U.S.-based carriers and air cargo lines that are not part of the partnership disagree with many of its claims, and the Gulf carriers deny the level of subsidies. And some consumers contend that the subsidies lower fares. But the best way to lower prices is global competition operating on a level playing field.
Support for free-trade pacts will decline even further if the public doesnt have the confidence that they will be enforced. Its critical for the airline sector and the economy at large for the U.S. to take the steps necessary to ensure a free and fair environment for airlines.
The following editorial appeared in The Gazette on Friday, June 9:
We dont pay workers to dig holes and fill them in for no reason. Government could do this to create jobs, but it would produce nothing of value at a cost to society.
Yet we talk about jobs provided by competing sources of energy without much concern for the return on investment.
President Donald Trump and other advocates do this when defending the coal industry. They point to coal miners as justification for ending the war on coal. The coal mine, they tell us, supports households that patronize businesses. The little league coach works at the coal mine. The job is reason enough to continue with coal. It is a weak argument, at the expense of sounder economic logic.
Environmentalists counter pro-mining arguments by citing the high and growing employment associated with solar. They quote Januarys 2017 U.S. Energy and Employment Report, which generated a media frenzy about the economic benefits of solar employment.
Solar employed more Americans in 2016 than coal, gas and oil combined. It comprised 43 percent of the electric sectors workforce.
If jobs were a good measure of an industrys worth, we would build roads with human shovel brigades instead of heavy equipment. Construction would cost more, with less efficient output, but would create more jobs.
We cant afford to do this because societys wealth is not enhanced by needless amounts of work. Standards of living improve only when output becomes greater and more efficient, as we find ways to produce more with less effort and expense. That is why we build roads with machines that out-produce hundreds of manually operated shovels. We need the most road miles for the least expense.
In assessing energy, we should focus less on jobs and more on helping end users afford to power offices, homes and cars. We should not fight for coal mining unless the jobs benefit consumers. We should not applaud solar employment as if the jobs are a means to an end.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration reports all those solar workers who outnumber their peers in oil, gas and coal produce 1 percent of the countrys electric needs. One coal miner produces as much energy as 79 workers in the solar industry. Two natural gas workers produce as much as 79 solar employees. One can argue the veracity of the data, but it is clear the industry needs to increase per-worker output.
Theres only one reason that the solar workforce has been increasing so rapidly (25 percent gain last year) despite its dismal record of worker productivity and minuscule share of U.S. electric power government policies that have subsidized the solar industry nearly 350 times more than fossil fuels per unit of electricity production, wrote Mark J. Perry, in an article for the Washington Examiner.
Society needs a surplus of affordable power, from diversified sources, produced and consumed as efficiently as possible with vigilant efforts to protect the environment.
If solar can compete, without massive and eternal subsidization, society will benefit. Solar will become more competitive as it minimizes the number of employees needed to produce a unit of power.
We should not defend any energy source as a means of creating expensive, low-yielding jobs. It is not fair to people who can barely pay utility bills, and it is no means of growing our economy. We should favor energy products that give us the most for the least.
The following editorial appeared in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch on Thursday, June 8:
Corporate shareholders are using their voting power to influence greater transparency by companies about the financial consequences of climate change. Big investors could turn out to be the environmental movements best friends in pressuring major corporations to address climate concerns.
A surprise vote last week by 62.3 percent of ExxonMobil shareholders highlights the power big money has over corporate behavior. Investors voted to instruct the petroleum giant to be more transparent about the cost of global measures designed to keep climate change to 2 degrees Celsius. The shareholder rebellion occurred at the companys annual meeting in Dallas. A year earlier, a similar proposal got only 38 percent support.
Top institutional shareholders could be behind this shift toward greater corporate environmental accountability. Their support came despite a company campaign that included calling, writing and lobbying shareholders in person to vote against climate-related proposals.
Institutional asset managers typically dont challenge management on social or political issues, but they can and should. Major asset management firms oversee trillions of investment dollars that can be used to reflect growing concerns among shareholders about important issues.
Besides, examined from a purely financial-benefit perspective, rising sea levels and global temperatures could hinder companies like ExxonMobil from operating in certain environments, which would translate into reduced financial performance and lower share values. Companies are required to declare such risks to shareholders if their investments could be affected.
New York Times columnist Gretchen Morgenson wrote recently that giant asset management firms BlackRock and Vanguard, which control a combined $9 trillion in assets, each voted in favor of management-sponsored proposals about 95 percent of the time. The days of automatically yielding to management could be ending.
Rubber-stamping sends a signal that corporations are operating perfectly and dont need to change, which Morgenson noted is an assessment clients would not agree with in some cases. She said they probably would support more transparent operations and better shareholder service overall.
Vanguard and BlackRock refused to disclose their Exxon votes, which came the same day President Donald Trump announced the U.S. would pull out of the Paris climate accord. That decision might have influenced their vote. Similar resolutions on climate change accountability won majority votes at Occidental Petroleum and Pennsylvania utility PPL, and hefty support at other companies, according to St. Louis Post-Dispatch business columnist David Nicklaus.
Nicklaus said investor clout is also being felt in the St. Louis region, with 44 percent of Emerson shareholders supporting a 2016 proposal asking the company to produce a sustainability report. The same percentage of Ameren investors backed a resolution for a climate change report.
Corporations have responded to investor pressure in the past, such as during the boycott movement to end apartheid in South Africa. This is a welcome wake-up call for executives to make climate change a priority concern.
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'War on drugs' is costing thousands of lives | Guest columns ... - Arizona Daily Sun
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Is Cambodia’s war on drugs working? – The Phnom Penh Post
Posted: at 4:45 am
Thavy, 24, spends her days avoiding the police, looking for a quiet place to sleep and trying to keep her heroin withdrawal at bay.
Before the campaign started, I could stay in one place, she said, remembering a time when passersby and police officers would ignore her as she used heroin or slept beside her children in public.
Like thousands of other drug users, Thavy, who asked to withhold her full name, was caught up in a nationwide crackdown that began in January. To date, more than 8,000 people have been arrested as part of the sweep, according to National Police statistics.
Branded as a six-month endeavour at the outset by the government, the crackdown should be reaching its end, though a senior official told The Post yesterday that a July meeting will help to determine if it will continue beyond the half-year mark.
While the crackdowns effectiveness in deterring drug use overall is unknown, a few things are clear: it has led to significant disruptions in outreach programmes, put pressure on crowded prisons and has received harsh criticism from human rights observers.
According to National Police spokesperson Kirth Chantharith, the first 163 days of the campaign saw the arrest of 4,298 suspected drug dealers and traffickers and 3,569 drug users. Observers say that despite the high number of traffickers arrested, the actual campaign tells a different story.
While emphasising the importance of halting the drug trade, the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights spokesman Sovanna Mann expressed concern that equal treatment is meted out regardless of the quantity of drugs found, the level of profits gained or whether medical attention is needed, rather than incarceration.
Human rights observers also called attention to overcrowding in Cambodian prisons, which Cambodian Center for Human Rights Advocacy Director Duch Piseth said has drastically increased the number of Cambodians awaiting trial in detention.
The use of extended pre-trial detention was already a problem in Cambodia before the recent crackdown. With this huge influx of new detainees into Cambodias already over-stretched criminal justice system, disproportionate and unjustified restrictions on the liberty of those facing criminal charges, as well as their right to be presumed innocent, are only likely to worsen, Piseth said.
The drug crackdown has caused alarm among local HIV prevention NGOs and the World Health Organization (WHO), who fear it will cause a spike in the already high HIV rate among injecting drug users, which was nearly one in four as of 2012. According to WHO Country Medical Officer Laurent Ferrandini, for arrested users, accessing antiretroviral drugs was difficult or impossible in some detention locations.
People using drugs were more difficult to reach through prevention programmes as they tend to avoid contacts that could lead to their identification as they become more afraid of being arrested, he said. He believed this fear accounts for a dip in the number of people visiting NGO-run drop-in centres providing basic HIV care and prevention services.
Mith Samlanh, an organisation that provides HIV prevention services, noted an alarming drop in programme beneficiaries receiving services, with the organisation distributing 17 percent fewer clean needles and syringes in the first five months of the year, compared to the same period last year, because fewer beneficiaries had lined up to collect them.
In order to ensure the quality of services, the [people who inject drugs (PWID)] need to at least receive three to four needles and syringes a day, explained Sem Sithat, a Mith Samlanh representative.
Another reason for the decline may be that the police have targeted people with any equipment related to drugs including clean needles for arrest.
When [the police] go for the crackdown, they dont care if you are using drugs; if they find equipment related to drugs, they will arrest, said Mith Samlanh outreach worker Thearith, who did not want to disclose his name because he was a former user himself.
Data collected by Mith Samlanh showed a 10 percent overall decline in PWID participation among the 430 people in the NGOs programmes.
According to another representative, Pin Sokhom, around 100 of the organisations beneficiaries were arrested during the campaign. Last year, the organisation was able to reach about half of its 430 participants more than twice week.
But right now [we reach] less than 15 people more than twice a week, he said. They [are] afraid to access services.
HIV prevention NGO Khana, which serves as the flagship organisation for HIV services provider Korsang, also reported a high number of arrests 41 out of more than 300 people they serve. Of these, a recovering heroin addict with HIV named Thhan Dang died in early May, having been unable to access methadone and antiretroviral therapy during his incarceration at the Prey Speu detention centre in Phnom Penh.
While medical services do exist in prisons and detention facilities, Khana Executive Director Chob Sok Chamreun said, they do not respond to the needs of an ever-growing population of incarcerated drug users. They just treat based on the symptoms, he said. If you [have a] fever, they give fever medication; you are shaking, they give medication to prevent shaking. Is that drug treatment? No.
Despite their reservations, neither Khana nor Mith Samlanh condemned the anti-drug campaign. Representatives of both say they support the initiative, but hope for better collaboration between the government and organisations providing support to drug users.
Our definition of success might be different from the government, said Sithat.
For us, we can say that if the victims are arrested, they can have the appropriate services, access social services when they are released, they can have opportunities like other people, and they have no chance of relapsing and are healthy. Then it is success.
Sithat proposed the government share information with outreach programmes about which users have been arrested and about needed services. Expanding methadone substitution therapy to prisons and other facilities would also help. Currently, the Khmer-Soviet Friendship Hospital in Phnom Penh houses Cambodias only methadone clinic.
Prisons Department spokesman San Keo dismissed worries that prison conditions were not adapted to the needs of drug users, stressing that the users have a personal responsibility to improve their lot. They receive food and medical treatment like everyone else, and when they change their behaviour and attitude [to become] like normal people, they will receive skills education, he said, citing sewing classes for women, and woodworking and welding classes for men.
Among six drug users interviewed by The Post last week, three had spent time in prison and detention centres. Of these, all continued using drugs, with two reporting that substances remained easily accessible within prison walls.
Asked whether the government could do more to cooperate with civil society, National Authority for Combating Drugs Secretary-General Meas Vyrith proposed via SMS that NGOs come to [the] NACD for discussion.
Vyrith said that he considers the campaign a success and suggested it could be extended, though the government has not decided whether it will do so. This decision, he said, depends on the outcome of a meeting planned for early July involving the NACD, relevant government institutions and provincial governors.
However, Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director for Human Rights Watch, criticised the measures that have already been taken, saying drug users face extortion and violence from police followed by more abuse in rehabilitation centres, and that the drug war should be getting wider attention internationally.
Whats amazing is this story on Cambodias own drug war has almost been almost invisible in the international news, perhaps because its hard to compare to the savagery of the Philippines shoot them down on the street drug war, and international editors see only room enough for one drug war story, he said.
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Losing the war on drugs | News, Sports, Jobs – Maui News – Maui News
Posted: at 4:45 am
The loss of superstar celebrities to drug overdoses shines a bright spotlight on our countrys drug epidemic. Princes death last year showed again that wealth is no protection from the ravages of drug addiction.
Yes, we know that heroin and opioid addictions can occur after treatment with those drugs for painful conditions. That may be somewhat understandable.
But what about the use of, say, crystal meth? Why would someone willingly put something in his body that used long enough can cause:
Persistent psychotic symptoms including delusions, paranoia and hallucinations.
Increased mental health issues like depression, anxiety and social isolation.
Confusion and odd behavior.
Feeling of bugs crawling on the skin.
Body sores from picking at their skin.
Cracked teeth.
Stroke.
Coma.
(Source drugabuse.com)
We read an article on U.S. News and World Reports website titled We have lost the war on drugs by Jeff Nesbit. He is a former director of legislative and public affairs for the National Science Foundation.
Nesbit noted that over 50,000 people died of drug overdoses in the United States in 2014. Over half were from heroin and prescription painkillers.
The truly alarming point of the story, though, is that the number of deadly overdoses has doubled just since the year 2000. It is evident that the abuse of opioids is largely responsible for the increase in overdoses, but the author points out that all these deadly drugs get a hold of your brain and never let go.
Nesbit urges an approach that combines compassion for the victims of drug addiction with giving them the understanding and knowledge of what it truly takes to regain control of their brain.
In short, it takes treatment and education not criminal prosecution to fight the war on drugs.
* Editorials reflect the opinion of the publisher.
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War on Drugs doesn’t need a surge – Allentown Morning Call
Posted: June 12, 2017 at 8:37 pm
The War on Drugs has been one of the most lopsided defeats ever.
We're talking Grenada vs. U.S. Custer vs. Sioux. Phillies vs. Everyone.
We've spent well over a trillion dollars and several decades in return for overflowing prisons, dead law enforcement officers, thriving drug dealers, urban battlegrounds controlled by gangs of thugs, grossly inadequate rehabilitation efforts and no reduction of drug use.
More and more people have figured this out. According to Gallup polling, a majority of Americans supported legalizing marijuana by 2013, and that number had reached 60 percent by last year. These attitudes have been playing themselves out in state legislatures all over the country.
Pennsylvania finally legalized medical marijuana last year, making it one of 29 states and the District of Columbia to do so. Eight states and the District of Columbia have legalized recreational use, and other states have decriminalized the possession of small amounts.
I was a passionate advocate for Pennsylvania's medical marijuana law, and I thought it was important not to muddy the waters by injecting recreational use into that discussion. But I've been clear about where I stand on that subject. As I wrote years ago, decriminalizing marijuana is a good start, but I wouldn't stop there.
If we legalized, regulated and taxed marijuana and other drugs, we not only would have a hefty injection of new funding for desperately needed treatment and educational programs from those tax revenues, but we'd also reap a windfall from savings in prison and law enforcement spending. Gangs and other criminals that depend so heavily on drug-dealing would find themselves out of business or operating at a severe competitive disadvantage.
Noting the monumental task facing state budget negotiators this year in the face of a growing deficit, Auditor General Eugene DePasquale said at a Capitol press conference, "If I told you that the budget negotiators from the Legislature and the governor's office will have $200 million of found money that does not harm one other state program or one other state tax, would they throw that money out the window or find a way to utilize it?"
He said, "The one area ... that will bring in revenue and actually cut costs at the exact same time would be the regulation and taxation of marijuana."
Former Allegheny County prosecutor, now criminal defense attorney Patrick Nightingale of the nonprofit Law Enforcement Action Partnership, an organization of criminal justice professionals who advocate for solutions across a broad range of drug policy and criminal justice issues, argued that DePasquale is underestimating the windfall when you consider the savings in incarceration and law enforcement costs.
He concluded, "It's a win win win for Pennsylvania if we can get out of our conservative reefer madness mentality."
LEAP, founded in 2002 as Law Enforcement Against Prohibition by five police officers dedicated to educating the public about the harms of drug prohibition, became Law Enforcement Action Partnership in January to broaden its areas of advocacy.
Even if recreational marijuana legalization is a bridge too far for some of you, I suspect the vast majority of readers would agree that we at least should decriminalize possession of marijuana, eliminate mandatory minimum sentences and clear our prisons of a lot of nonviolent offenders.
Two bills have been introduced in the state Legislature that would reduce a conviction for possession of small amounts of marijuana from a misdemeanor to a summary offense, punishable by a relatively low fine instead of potential jail time.
Unfortunately, as with many other areas of progress in our society, this growing realization that drug policies of the past aren't working hit a big, not-so-beautiful wall with the election of Donald Trump and his appointment of troglodytic Attorney General Jeff Sessions.
Far from approving the trend toward scaling back the War on Drugs, Sessions wants a troop surge that would include prosecuting more drug cases, seeking more mandatory minimum sentences and directly confronting what he considers a deadly trend toward legalization of the evil weed.
Sessions said at a Senate hearing last year that our elected leaders should make it clear they take marijuana prevention efforts seriously, by "the creating of knowledge that this drug is dangerous, you cannot play with it, it is not funny, it's not something to laugh about ... and trying to send that message with clarity that good people don't smoke marijuana."
Nightingale told me, "It's as if we woke up in 1983 with Jeff Sessions. 'Good people don't use marijuana.' 'It's a gateway drug.' 'I don't believe it has medical value.'"
Nightingale, who also is executive director of the Pittsburgh branch of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, said, "We can look at three, four years' worth of data from Colorado to understand that loosening marijuana laws is not resulting in an increase of criminality, it's not resulting in an increase in hard drug use. In fact, it's the opposite."
He was particularly critical of a memo Sessions sent out last month to federal prosecutors that reversed the Obama administration approach to low-level drug crime. Sessions wants prosecutors to charge violators with the most serious offenses they can prove and seek the most substantial sentences.
Former Attorney General Eric Holder responded at the time, "The policy announced today is not tough on crime. It is dumb on crime. It is an ideologically motivated, cookie-cutter approach that has only been proven to generate unfairly long sentences that are often applied indiscriminately and do little to achieve long-term public safety."
Nightingale said Sessions thinks locking more people up for longer stretches will help solve our drug problems. "We absolutely know from 45 years of failed drug policy," he said, "that is not going to work."
This is no time for a troop surge. It's time for a carefully negotiated peace.
bill.white@mcall.com 610-820-6105
Bill White's commentary appears Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays
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