Philippine
President Rodrigo Duterte’s bloody war on drugs is just the latest in a
region where drug use has usually been met with draconian measures. Thailand
embarked 13 years ago on a drug war that strikes eerie parallels with the Philippine situation.
Today,
lawmakers in the Philippines are plotting the restoration of the death penalty to bolster
the anti-drug campaign. But this, too, is par for the course in the region.
In July
2016, Indonesia executed four convicted drug offenders. On
November 17, Singapore executed two men – one Nigerian and one
Malaysian – for similar offences.
Reflecting the position of its member
states, ASEAN
has also adopted a hardline stance, reaffirming the region’s “zero-tolerance approach” to drugs in its
annual summit in September.
But there’s broad consensus among researchers that the
war on drugs, which typically consists of punitive measures and forced
rehabilitation, doesn’t work. And that it’s marked by human rights violations
as well as huge social, moral and medical costs.
In one of the most forceful arguments
against the drug war, Columbia University neuroscientist Carl Hart stresses
that harsh punishments do nothing but prevent young drug users from integrating
back into society. And such measures ultimately end up being more
harmful than the drugs themselves.
What’s worse is that the drug war
disproportionately affects the poor and other socially excluded groups,
including ethnic minorities. But if the war on drugs doesn’t
work, what does?
Successes with harm
reduction
At the country level, Portugal’s success story is illustrative.
In 2001, the European nation, while not changing the legal status of drugs,
changed the way it dealt with drug users.
Instead of putting people in jail, a new
law called for their referral to three-person local committees. These
committees were given the freedom to consider a range of interventions
depending on the user in question.
Those who demonstrate drug dependence are
encouraged to seek treatment. Others are discouraged from using drugs through
fines and penalties, such as driver’s license suspensions.
Ten years on, drug use rates have not increased, while
drug-related deaths, as well as problematic and adolescent drug use, have
decreased.
Portugal’s success, although mirrored by
countries such as the the Netherlands, is far from the norm. But
even in countries that continue to implement tough approaches, localized
interventions are producing promising results. These include nations in
Southeast Asia.
In Malaysia, for instance, the
implementation of a needle-exchange program has led to a sharp drop in HIV
infections among injecting drug users – from a peak of 5,176 in 2002 to 680 in
2014.
In Vietnam, a 2009 methadone maintenance therapy (MMT) program
involving 965 opiate users at two sites led to 85.4% and 77.1% reductions in
heroin use two years later. This successful pilot led to a scaling-up of the
project. By 2014, Vietnam was offering its MMT program in 162 clinics to 32,000
patients.
What these programs have in common is a
harm-reduction framework – the idea that the government’s role is to reduce the
negative effects of drugs rather than try to eliminate their use entirely.
Critics allege that harm reduction actually encourages drug use, but the
Portuguese experience, among many others, belies this claim.
A different paradigm
Inez Feria, director of NoBox Philippines,
an NGO committed to drug policy reform, has stressed that drug users “have
different lives with different stories, and it’s tremendously important to
understand, without judgement, each one’s”.
Underpinning successful efforts to deal
with drugs, then, must be a paradigm that is open to multiple approaches. This
is especially applicable to amphetamine-type stimulants (ATS) such as
methamphetamine. As a policy brief drawing from the Thai and Burmese
experience states:
Since the pattern of ATS use extends from
occasional and recreational use to heavy and dependent use, and only a minority
of ATS users fall into the problematic category, the response should vary in
accordance with the nature and severity of a person’s involvement with ATS.
Different interventions are required to address the complexity of ATS use.
In my research
among young methamphetamine users in the Philippines, I met youths
who stopped using the drug when they managed to get jobs. Sadly, many were
unable to do so, lacking education or the social connections through which to
seek assistance.
What’s more, the very stigma associated
with drug-use prevents them from being offered opportunities. These findings
point strongly to the need to look at “risk environments” – that is, the social
and economic contexts in which drug use occurs. They also make the case for
considering community-based interventions.
Finding common ground
Harm-reduction approaches can only work if
governments and policymakers alike recognise the complexity of the “drug
problem”. No single solution exists for all kinds of drug users, or all kinds
of drug use.
In what we can see as a silver lining,
politicians are beginning to pay more attention to drug issues in their
countries. Even in the Philippines, government officials are opening up to
alternative approaches. Philippine Secretary of Health Paulyn Ubial, for
instance, recently spoke of drugs as a “public health
emergency” and a “mental health problem”, in a welcome departure from her
president’s rhetoric.
Drug policy advocates can use this common
ground as a starting point for engaging with governments. While the evidence is
overwhelming that a zero tolerance approach to drugs doesn’t work, it’s also
important to steer the conversation towards what does, and nudge leaders in
that direction – even if the road is paved with incremental, localised changes.
The example from Vietnam – of a pilot
study leading to a scaled-up response – is a promising sign of how research and
evidence can change public perception and policies.
The stakes can’t be higher: suspected drug
users are being extra-judicially killed and legally executed in the region,
even as drug use continues to rise.
What little success harm-reduction
advocates can achieve could form the wedge that may finally crack the
iron-fisted approach toward drug users. And it may ultimately solve Southeast
Asia’s long-standing drug problem.
Gideon Lasco, PhD candidate in Medical
Anthropology, Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research (AISSR), University of Amsterdam
This article was originally published on The
Conversation
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