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Portugal
Portugal Decriminalizes Drug Use and Possession, Prescription
Heroin and Injection Rooms Coming Next?
7/14/00
The Portuguese parliament voted on July 6 to decriminalize
the use and possession of illegal drugs. The measure, which
includes both "soft" drugs such as marijuana and
"hard" drugs such as heroin and cocaine, keeps criminal
penalties for production and trafficking in illegal drugs.
"The idea is to get away from punishment and move toward
treatment," a spokesman for the Ministry of the Presidency,
which handles drug policy, told Reuters.
Under existing Portuguese law, drug users and possessors
faced up to a year in jail. Now, instead of a criminal charge,
offenders will be charged with an "offense against the
social order" and fined. Police will report drug takers
to special local commissions, which are charged with ensuring
that addicts seek treatment. The fines will be waived if the
offender accepts drug treatment.
"It was agreed that in relation to drug addicts, a fine
system will no longer be applied; a sick person should not
be compelled to pay a fine. He should instead be supported
under the best possible circumstances," said Left Bloc
Deputy Francisco Louçã.
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The ruling Socialist Party needed help from the Communist Party,
the Left Bloc and ecological parties to win the vote. The measure
survived a negative publicity campaign by the conservative Social
Democratic Party, which bought ads in five major newspapers, Narco
News reported (http://www.narconews.com/portugal1.html).
According to Narco News, the vote marks the first time that leftist
parties anywhere have united to support decriminalization. It also
comes in the wake of US efforts to enlist European Union support
for American escalation in Colombia.
Portugal now joins Italy and Spain among European Union member states
which have effectively decriminalized the use and possession of
small amounts of illegal drugs.
Parliament is now in recess until September, but members of the
Left Bloc have announced plans to introduce even deeper reforms
when the session resumes. They will introduce legislation to have
the government supply addicts with heroin and provide "injection
rooms" where users can inject in a safe and therapeutic environment
Source:http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/145/portugal.shtml
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Drug Possession No Longer a Crime in Portugal
7/6/01
In the latest sign of European rejection of US and UN-sponsored
repressive anti-drug strategies, Portugal's new drug laws
went into effect on July 1. Under the laws, debated last summer
and finalized in November, possession of personal amounts
of any drug is no longer a crime. Instead, possession of up
to a ten-day supply of any drug will be treated as an administrative
matter rather than a criminal offense. Persons caught possessing
drugs will have their stashes confiscated and be referred
to a commission of doctors, lawyers, and social workers who
will decide if they need counseling or treatment. Previously,
persons caught with drugs faced up to a year in jail.
Drug trafficking remains a crime, although dealing to pay
for a drug habit will be considered a mitigating factor.
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United Nations International Drug Control Board (INCB) officials
immediately lashed out at the new law. INCB Deputy Head Akira Fujino
told the Swedish newspaper Svenska Dagbladet: "There is a clear
trend in Western Europe to decriminalize use and possession of narcotics
and to view addicts as patients. But that seldom solves the addict's
personal problems nor reduces the demand for narcotics," complained
the prohibition bureaucrat. "Other countries that have chosen
a liberal approach such as special injection rooms, are Switzerland,
Germany, Spain and Holland, and we are deeply concerned over this
trend."
Citing the possibility of a spill-over effect for the rest of the
European Union, Fujino warned that: "The Portugese law can
trap more 'at risk' into dependency as well as increase the misery
of those already addicted. The law, in effect, says that it's OK
to consume narcotics."
Portuguese officials have more concrete concerns. The number of
hard drug addicts has escalated over the past decade, and Portugal
has Europe's highest HIV infection rate. According to the European
Monitoring Center for Drugs and Drug Addiction (http://www.emcdda.org),
Portugal, with a population of ten million, has between 50,000 and
200,000 drug addicts. By contrast, the Netherlands, with 16 million
inhabitants and a liberal drug policy, has an estimated 25,000 addicts.
The new law reflects Portugal's turn to harm reduction and away
from repression in an effort to blunt the damage from drug prohibition.
"The idea is to get away from punishment and move toward care,"
Portuguese government spokesman Carlos Borges told Reuters.
That Portugal has decriminalized the possession of drugs is apparently
not newsworthy in the US. DRCNet has been unable to find any mention
of this story in mainstream media outlets in this country.
Source:http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/193/portugalpossession.shtml
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