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Major Studies of Drugs and Drug Policy | ||||
Canadian Senate Special Committee on Illegal Drugs | ||||
Volume 3 - Public Policy Options |
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Chapter 19 - The International Legal EnvironmentProtocol
amending the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, 1961
In the early
1970s, U.S. President Richard Nixon officially declared “war on drugs” in
response to the massive drug abuse in the U.S. and the social damage it was
causing. This announcement had global repercussions.[1][79] In 1971, as
part of the Nixon administration’s international anti-narcotics campaign, U.S.
officials suggested creating a government-funded, UN-administered fund to
combat drug abuse.[2][80] The United Nations Fund for Drug
Abuse Control (UNFDAC) was launched in 1971 with an initial $2 million donation
from the U.S. Other governments were reluctant to contribute because of the
motives behind the Fund. This reluctance was well founded as UNFDAC essentially
became a U.S. tool. The emphasis was on law enforcement and crop substitution
rather than abuse and demand-oriented strategies. Money went primarily to
projects that involved U.S. allies and focused on countries where the U.S. had
been unable to stop opium production.[3][81] The Fund was
also sharply criticized for succumbing to the inefficiency of the UN’s
bureaucratic machinery: “A large
proportion of the money allocated to the Fund’s various programs is in fact
spent on supporting an ever-expanding bureaucracy to administer the programs.
Indeed many of the Programs appear to serve no purpose other than to provide
occupation for the enlarged secretariats.”[4][82] It was also argued that the UNFDAC
should be transferred from the drug control bodies under ECOSOC to the United
Nations Development Program, which was better able to assess the development
and aid needs of recipient countries.[5][83] Another key
initiative of the Nixon administration was to strengthen the Single Convention.
As a result of heavy U.S. lobbying, a UN plenipotentiary conference was
convened in March 1972 to amend the Convention.[6][84] What came out of the conference was
the Single Convention Protocol. The main goal of the amendments was to expand
the INCB’s role in controlling licit and illicit opium production and illicit
drug trafficking in general. The U.S. wanted to revive certain aspects of the
1953 Opium Protocol by attempting to reduce licit opium production. However, in
1972, licit production was just meeting licit demand, and few countries were
willing to risk a global shortage of opium for medical use.[7][85] Consequently, the U.S. proposals
were significantly diluted. The backbone
of the Single Convention Protocol consists of provisions that enhance the
INCB’s powers, especially in relation to illicit trafficking. In Article 2 of
the Single Convention, the definition of the INCB’s functions now includes an
explicit reference to the prevention of “illicit
cultivation, production and manufacture of, and illicit trafficking in and use
of, drugs.” Article 35 encourages Parties to supply the INCB and the CND
with information on the illicit drug activity in their territory; as well, the
INCB is empowered to advise Parties on their efforts to reduce illicit drug
trafficking. When Parties conclude extradition treaties with one another, such
agreements are now deemed to automatically include the drug-related offences
set out in the Single Convention, including trafficking.[8][86] Article 22(2) of the Psychotropics
Convention says only that it is “desirable” that such offences be made
extraditable. The Protocol
amended the Single Convention’s abuse prevention provisions to bring them into
line with Article 20 of the Psychotropics Convention.[9][87] The amended Single Convention also
echoes the Psychotropics Convention by now allowing countries to use “treatment, education, after-care,
rehabilitation and social reintegration” either as an alternative to or in
addition to conviction or punishment.[10][88] Although not
as stringent as originally intended by the U.S., the Single Convention Protocol
continued the prohibitive tradition of the international drug control regime,
especially against opium, and stepped up the war on illicit trafficking. [1][79]
Musto (1999), page 248-259; Bruun et
al. (1975), ch. 10. [2][80]
The U.S. campaign included massive international funding for crop
substitution, technical assistance to improve the administration and law
enforcement, initiatives to combat smuggling, and coordination of educational
programs. However, many developing countries were wary of U.S. money with
strings attached. The Americans saw the Fund as a way to get around that reluctance.
(McAllister (2000),
page 236-237) [3][81]
Ibid., page 238. [4][82]
Bruun et al. (1975), page 281. [5][83]
Ibid., page 282; Kušević
(1975), page 51. [6][84] U.S. ambassadors were
selected specifically for the purpose of visiting signatory countries to
persuade their leaders to support the amendments proposed by the U.S. It is
widely believed that the conference was largely an instrument that Nixon
planned to use in the approaching presidential election. (Kušević (1975),
page 47) [7][85] Kušević (1975),
page 48. According to Kušević, it would have been better to try to reduce
the diversion of licit demand into
the illicit market. [8][86]
Single Convention, Article 36, as amended by the Single Convention
Protocol, Article 14. [9][87]
Ibid., Article 38, as amended
by the Single Convention Protocol, Article 15. [10][88]
Ibid., Article 36, as
amended by the Single Convention Protocol, Article 14. |