Addicts treated as health and social problem
http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,524529,00.html
Giles Tremlett in Lisbon
Portugal has forced back the frontiers
of drug liberalisation in Europe with a law which, at a stroke, decriminalises
the use of all previously banned narcotics, from cannabis to crack cocaine.
Vitalino Canas, the drug tsar appointed
by the Socialist prime minister, Antonio Guterres, to steer the law into
place, said yesterday that it made more sense to change the law than ignore
it, as police forces do in Holland, parts of Swizerland, and now experimentally
in the Brixton area of London.
"Why not be clear about this, and
change the law to recognise that consuming drugs can be an illness or the
route to illness?" he said. "America has spent billions on enforcement
but it has got nowhere. We view drug users as people who need help and
care."
He admitted that Mr Guterres was
taking a risk, but said Portugal had no real choice. The police had stopped
arresting suspects and the courts were throwing out cases against users
rather than apply legislation which sent them to prison for up to three
years.
Margarida Costa, 35, a skeletal addict
who has found a home at a drug treatment hostel, said prison had never
helped her. "In fact, I started taking drugs in jail," she said. "You could
get everything you wanted in there, every day."
Still emaciated from 10 years of
heroin abuse and living rough, she is on methadone and preparing to return
to living with her mother.
Out of the ghetto
She is lucky. She has escaped from
Casal Ventoso, Europe's worst drugs ghetto, where 800 or so addicts lived
rough in tents or shacks of wood and corrugated iron. Up to 5,000 more
poured in daily to buy their heroin fix. The government is now bulldozing
the ghetto but hundreds of addicts still shoot up there at all hours.
Up to 100 at a time gather nearby
in Maria Pia Street, blocking traffic as they wait for dealers, and are
joined by smart couples in four-wheel-drive vehicles seeking their daily
dose.
"I know of doctors, lawyers, teachers,
and even a police officer, who are all secretly hooked on heroin," said
Luis Patricio, the psychologist who led the campaign to treat Casal Ventoso
as a public health problem.
Most countries had got the relationship
between drugs, crime and jail the wrong way around, he said.
"Prison is a university of crime.
People learn violence there."
The rightwing opposition is predicting
a catastrophic boom in drug consumption and the sudden arrival of thousands
of hardened addicts and thrill-seekers from around Europe.
"We promise sun, beaches and any
drug you like," Paulo Portas, leader of the Popular party, said.
But Mr Canas insisted that he was
not turning Portugal into Europe's drug paradise. "We are still fighting
a war against drugs, but wars have their victims and the drug users are
victims of the traffickers," he said.
The police, armed with new laws prescribing
hefty prisons sentences and the confiscation of all money and property,
have been been ordered to turn their undivided attention to the drug mafias.
Decriminalising drugs is not the
same as legalising them, Mr Canas pointed out. In fact drug use can still
be punished under the new law, but the responsibility has been shifted
to independent drug dissuasion commissions, which can impose £900
fines, order community service or detoxification programmes, and take away
the jobs of those no longer fit to hold them.
"The courts just made things worse.
Here we will help them, but also watch over them," said Americo Gegaloto,
the lawyer who heads the commission in Setubal, south of Lisbon.
Fines and treatment
He and the two social workers who
sit with him now decide what happens to drug users in a district covering
the industrialised south bank of the Tagus.
The police still detain users and
confiscate their drugs but, instead of locking them up or taking them to
court they send their names and addresses to the commission.
In the Setubal commission's offices
in the basement of a city centre block of flats, in a small room decorated
with floral prints, they are questioned across what could be a dining room
table and a decision on their future is taken.
It is the recreational drug users
who are most likely to be fined. Addicts will be sent to detoxification
or other health programmes, if the £175m budget for implementing
the law allows.
Mr Gegaloto expects heroin users
to take up much of his time. But yesterday his only drug user was a boyish
19-year-old national serviceman called Paulo in sailor's uniform, sent
by the military police, whose dogs sniffed out a lump of hash.
Paulo was all smiles and polite handshakes,
thankful that he would have no criminal record but bewildered by the attention
of so many people.
He was let off without a fine, but
had to promise to give up joints and visit weekly. His name will go on
a confidential drug users register for five years.
At Casal Ventoso, Police Sergeant
Henrique Pires was not so sure about the new law. The presence of his squad
of 10 men had simply pushed addicts 20 metres down the street.
Occasionally his unit's van is stoned
or a bottle flies out from the rubble. "It was better before," he grumbled.
Paulo Lima, a former Casal Ventoso
resident now at a detoxification clinic, disagreed. "There is no point
arresting us. But they should still take the drugs off people."
Friday July 20, 2001
The Guardian
The new law, which came into effect
on 1 July, takes a socially conservative country with traditional Catholic
values far ahead of much of northern Europe, including Britain, in treating
drug abuse as a social and health problem rather than a criminal one.