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UN wants tougher stance on celebrity drug
users
Peter
Apps
LONDON—Prosecutors worldwide are too lenient on celebrities who use
drugs, sending a dangerous message to young people, the United Nations
said on Wednesday in its global report on illegal narcotics trends. The
U.N. International Narcotics Control Board said overall drug usage
appeared stable, but soaring opium production in Afghanistan was
fuelling heroin use in its neighbours and globally. It also warned that
drug smugglers were increasingly using West Africa as a transit point to
bring cocaine and other substances into Europe from Latin America by air
and sea.
The board said too many governments disproportionately targeted ordinary
addicts and street dealers while doing too little to tackle the larger
narcotics gangs — and letting high-profile users walk free. “The fact is
that when a celebrity uses drugs, he or she breaks the law,” board
member and report author Hamid Ghodse told a news conference in London.
“Young people are quick to pick up on, and react to, perceived
leniency... It also makes people become cynical about drug enforcement.”
He refused to name any particular individuals or countries considered
too soft on famous users. To be effective, authorities must get tougher
on those at the top of the illicit drug trade, Ghodse said, adding that
because this was not easy, many law enforcers chased the easy pickings
at the bottom of the pyramid.
Overall, Ghodse said, more coordination across borders was key to
cracking the trade. But he said the situation in the world’s fastest
growing drug producer Afghanistan, now producing more than 93 percent of
global opiates, was out of control. Despite attempts to curb poppy
growing, opium production has grown steadily from a low point in 2001,
shortly before the Islamist Taliban were ousted by U.S.-led forces.
The report attributed the world’s highest addiction rate — almost 3
percent of adults in Iran — on Afghan heroin. INCB said part of the
problem was that key chemicals used in refining opium into heroin were
being freely allowed into Afghanistan. Drug control has become secondary
as U.S., NATO and Afghan forces try to stop a resurgent Taliban in the
southern drug producing provinces.
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