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UN anti-drugs tsar criticises Winehouse,
Moss
Showbiz
Desk
LONDON—The United Nations’ anti-drugs chief attacked celebrities like
singer Amy Winehouse and supermodel Kate Moss, saying they fuel problems
in Africa by allegedly taking drugs in an interview Sunday. Antonio
Maria Costa, executive director of the UN’s Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC),
said some stars were sending out the wrong message on drugs, which he
linked to violence and corruption. He contrasted this approach with that
of singers Bono and Bob Geldof, both campaigners against poverty in
Africa, and stars who have worked against the blood diamond trade,
highlighted in the 2006 film of the same name.
“While some glitterati are trying to save Africa, others are
contributing to its demise,” Costa wrote in the Observer newspaper.
“Coke-snorting fashionistas are not only damaging their noses and their
brains — they are contributing to state failure on the other side of the
world. “Amy Winehouse might adopt a defiant pose and slur her way
through ‘Rehab’ (her hit single) but does she realise the message she
sends to others who are vulnerable to addiction and who cannot afford
expensive treatment?
“Are such stars who flaunt their drug use aware of the damage caused by
the trafficking of cocaine from South America via Africa to Europe?” He
added: “For every rebel with a cause, there are 10 others without a
clue. “While some well-meaning pop idols and film stars might rage
against suffering in Africa, their work is being undermined by the drug
habits of careless peers such as Kate Moss.”
Costa said that supplies of drugs from South America bound for Europe
often pass through west Africa because governments there cannot mount
effective security operations against drug traders. The drugs trade
there “is causing untold misery, corruption, violence and instability,”
he added. His comments come in the wake of last week’s UN report which
warned that letting celebrities get away with drug crimes sends out the
wrong message to impressionable young people. The International
Narcotics Control Board report did not name names but said famous people
who break the law should be treated the same as non-celebrities.
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