Date: Sun, 24 Apr 1994 13:23:44 -0700
From: International Antiprohibition League <[i--l] at [igc.apc.org]>
Subject: IAL-Fax!

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INTERNATIONAL  ANTI-PROHIBITIONIST  LEAGUE
-------------------------------------------

P.E. - REM 508  - 89 Rue BELLIARD - 1040 BRUXELLES - BELGIUM

Tel: (32)-2-230.4121 - Fax: (32)-2-230.3670 - Email:
<[i--l] at [igc.apc.org]>

============================================ IAL-Fax, Year III, N. 9,
April 15, 1994 - Contents:
============================================

NEW WORLD ORDER FAVOURS TRAFFICKERS
I.P.S., 21.3.94.

GOVERNMENT OF VENEZUELA OPPOSED TO LEGALIZATION
I.P.S., 21.3.94

COURT WARNS THAT DRUGS MONEY IS CORRUPTING POLITICS
El Pais, 22.3.94. Julio M. Lazaro

CRACK ABUSE SPREADING IN PARIS
Libration, 22.3.94. Fran ois Devinat

CHRONICLE OF A LOST WAR
Le Monde Diplomatique, April 94. Christian de Brie

US REPORT ON DRUG TRAFFIC PUBLISHED
La Repubblica, 6.4.94. Arturo Zampiglione

EUROPEAN ANTI-DRUGS OPERATION
Le Soir, 28.3.94.
-----------------------------------------------------

NEW WORLD ORDER FAVOURS TRAFFICKERS
I.P.S., 21.3.94.

The so-called new world order has created very favourable conditions
for international drug traffickers, the head of U.S. drug policy said
Monday.  Lee Brown, director of the National Office of Drug Control
Policy, explained that "a drug trafficker can (now) launder profits in
Poland, as easily as in Panama." Brown spoke at the opening of a
four-day conference of Latin American experts on the worldwide effects
of drug trafficking and consumption, taking place in the Venezuelan
capital.  Offering another example, Brown said that "Nigerian drug
mafias act as world messengers and intermediaries for heroin, cocaine
and other drugs." More than 100 regional experts are participating in
the U.S.-sponsored conference.  Maria Cristina Requiz, president of
the local Jose Felix Ribas Foundation, told IPS that the primary goal
of this first Conference of Latin American Drug Experts is to
establish a connection between all those who fight drug use in the
region.  The conference will allow experts to evaluate risk factors in
drug consumption, global drug legislation proposals, and the
usefulness of the media and educational programs in schools.  At the
first session of the conference, Venezuela's Minister of Interior
Relations, Ramon Escovar, said that the principal risk factor in Latin
America is poverty.  Escovar said the problems of drug consumption and
trafficking have grown as fast as the quality of life has declined.
Brown urged governments and civil organisations of the region not to
interpret internationl efforts against drug trafficking as a threat to
national sovereignty.  "Drug traffickers understand very well the
power of the concept of sovereignty as a political force in Latin
America," he said.  In terms of arguments for the legalisation of drug
use, Brown was adamantly opposed.  "The Swiss experiment with a more
permissive drug policy has had disastrous effects on the increase in
addiction and loss of life," Brown said.
-----------------------------------------------------

GOVERNMENT OF VENEZUELA OPPOSED TO LEGALIZATION
I.P.S., 21.3.94.

The Venezuelan Minister of Justice, Ruben Creixems, stated today that
"the legalization of drugs is not planned in the country", but assured
that he respects the position of other countries with different
positions.  "The legalization of the use of drugs involves very
delicate legal questions, and for this reason we must respect the
decision of each nation in order to prevent the issue from disturbing
the fight against drugs," said the minister.  Creixems took part on
Monday in the opening day of the First Latin American Conference of
Drug Experts, held in Caracas under the patronage of the United
States.  Creixems, an academic and the youngest member of Rafael
Caldera's cabinet, thus joined the debate which has been in progress
since the beginning of the year on the advantages and disadvantages of
partial legalization of the use of drugs.  Although opposed to
legalization, Creixems does not support the hardline position of the
United States, which is against any form of depenalization of drug use
in the countries of Latin America.  In Venezuela, according to the
statistics available, the use of drugs has not reached alarming
levels, but the country is increasingly a bridge and a centre of
drug-trafficking operations, as well as a centre of money laundering.
-----------------------------------------------------

COURT WARNS THAT DRUGS MONEY IS CORRUPTING POLITICS
El Pais, 22.3.94.

Javier Zaragoza, second-in-command in the anti-drugs force, yesterday
told the court during the Operation Mago trial that the infiltration
of the institutions and political corruption through drugs money is
"just around the corner". According to Zaragoza, "the incalculable
profits of the drug traffickers, channelled into legal activities
through money laundering, aim to influence political affairs." The
trial of the Galician cocaine and hashish bosses began six months ago
and has involved 450 witnesses. In his concluding report, Zaragoza
warned that the aim of the drugs networks is to gain power through
threats, coertion, corruption and "if necessary, assassination".
Zaragoza, who asked for a total of about 700 years imprisonment for
the 45 defendants, underlined the need to collaborate with reformed
traffickers in order to fight what he calls the main problem of
society. The public prosecutor warned of the incipient "mafia
organizations", which aggravates the situation in Galicia, a region
that "has very chance of becoming a little Sicily".
-----------------------------------------------------

CRACK ABUSE SPEADING IN PARIS
Libration, 22.3.94. Fran ois Devinat

For a long time, the police and drug addiction experts hesitated to
announce the arrival of crack in France, fearing that such publicity
would have devastating effects. They claimed that there was no
evidence that crack, the "cocaine of the homeless" which has spread
like wildfire in America since 1986, had reached Europe. Now, however,
a French study, the first of its type on the subject, sounds the alarm
by concluding that "cocaine in the form of crack is now a major
feature of the drugs scene".  In France, crack began to be mentioned
by the police in 1989. At that time people spoke of "caillou" or
"Antillean crack", not produced from "paste" (a cocaine base
containing a number of chemical additives) but from purified products,
less harmful, in theory, than American crack. In June 1993, the Paris
Police Chief Philippe Massoni admitted that "it's true, crack can be
found in the capital. Don't ask me to tell you where, I don't want to
worsen the phenomenon" (interview with France Soir).  Dr Ingold, in
charge of the study carried out by the Institute for Research into the
Epidemology of Drug Dependence, while pointing to the risk of a spread
to the large cities in the provinces, concluded with a pessimistic
observation: "It is much too late for a so-called "information
campaign". Users will have to learn for themselves that crack is an
infinitiely more destructive drug than heroin and other products."
-----------------------------------------------------

CHRONICLE OF A LOST WAR
Le Monde Diplomatique, April 94. Christian de Brie

The war on drugs has been lost. This is admitted, in France and
elsewhere, by police officers, judges, and doctors. A thirty-year war
conducted by an international prohibitionist coalition, led by the
United States, is drawing to a close. The general public are still not
ready to accept this defeat, no more than the political leaders are
prepared to draw the consequences. And yet, in the face of such a
great disaster, reversals are already taking place and new strategies
are being developed, while measures are being taken to try to limit
the damage. Begun during the sixties and seventies, the war on drugs,
that is the policy of prohibiting the production, trade and use of
drugs classed as illegal, has been backed by a powerful and growing
arsenal of repressive measures. In order to ensure the application of
international conventions, regional agreements and many restrictive
national laws, often a threat to individual liberties, have created a
vast network of bureaucratic bodies at all levels. The police, armies,
customs, the legal system, penitential, fiscal and financial
administrations, medical teams and health services, and committees and
commissions for research and co-ordination have perfected and
diversified their activities and expanded their staffs and budgets.
Throughout the world, hundreds of thousands of agents take part in the
fight and hundreds of billions of dollars are spent every year. All
this in a climate of all-out war, with repeated episodes of increasing
violence, with the media keeping the general public permanently on
guard against the "enemies" - from the warlords in the Golden Triangle
to the Chinese triads in Hong Kong, from the French Connection
chemists to the Arab and Pakistani BCCI bankers, from General Noriega
to Pablo Escobar, from the gunmen of Bogota to the gangs of Los
Angeles.  The results of the war are incontestable: during the same
period, the traffic and use of illegal drugs continued to increase. In
the first place the cultivation zones, the production centres and the
transit routes of the principal drugs (cannabis, heroin and cocaine),
previously restricted to specific areas, began to spread and now cover
almost the entire planet. In fact opium production and the traffic of
morphine and heroin have expanded from the Golden Triangle and the
Golden Crescent to Central Asia and China, Eastern Europe and Russia,
and even Africa.
-----------------------------------------------------

US REPORT ON DRUG TRAFFIC PUBLISHED
La Repubblica, 6.4.94. Arturo Zampiglione

The emergence of Nigeria as a world "paradise" for drug trafficking.
The challenge to cocaine from heroin in the United States. The global
role assumed by the Russian mafia in the exportation of opium produced
in Afghanistan and many countries of the former Soviet Union.The boom
in the cultivation of coca in Bolivia and its decline in Peru. These
are some of the new developments in the international drugs trade
contained in the Department of State report published on Monday in the
US capital. Since 1986, by order of Congress, the US government has
published an annual analysis of the war on drugs in the different
areas of the world: the main aim is to identify the countries which
are not collaborating with international efforts, so that they can
subsequently be excluded from US financial support.  In truth, the
strategy has so far not had the desired results because the countries
identified were those with which the US had already reduced relations
to a bare minimum. This year the list includes four countries: Myanmar
(Burma), Iran, Syria, and Nigeria. Whilst the first three had already
been included in the past, Nigeria appears on the blacklist for the
first time. Robert Gelbard, Under-Secretary for the international
anti-drugs campaign, explained that "Nigeria has become a major centre
for drug trafficking."
-----------------------------------------------------

EUROPEAN ANTI-DRUGS OPERATION
Le Soir, 28.3.94.

On Friday evening Belgian, Dutch and French police launched a
large-scale operation against drugs tourists who come to the
Netherlands from Belgium and France. The police operation, divided
into two parts, was organized in Belgium by the Police Central
Research Bureau and the chief magistrate. The first part, aimed at the
drugs-runners, involved the Belgian police alone. The second part,
directed against the "drugs tourists", consisted in simultaneous
controls carried out along the main road and rail routes from the
Netherlands.

=====================================================

The International Antiprohibitionist League (IAL) is an association of
scientists, drug experts, journalists, politicians from all over the
world whose aim is to work for the reform of prohibitionist laws on
drugs.

As a multicultural and independent association, the IAL encourages
studies and research projects on the consequences of prohibition and
proposes alternative at both political and social levels.

Among its activities, the IAL sponsored a forum on "The costs of
Prohibition on Drugs" in Bruxelles, worked in close contact with the
Italian anti-prohibitionist movement, and helped the organization of
similar associations in Spain, Portugal, France.

Recently, a report "For a Revision of the United Nations Conventions
on Drugs" was distributed among members of the European Parliament and
other National Parliaments.

The most immediate goal of the IAL is the organization of an
International Conference on the alternatives to  drug prohibition to
be held under the approval of the United Nations in 1995.

Financially supported by its members and private contributions, the
IAL has three different levels for its annual membership:
- Associate member: US $ 50
- Full member: US $ 100
- Special member: US $ 300

Payment from the US can be made by:
- Credit Card (American Express, Visa, Mastercard);
- Bank Transfer to: IAL, account # 424-6075921-55, Kredietbank,
Bruxelles, Belgium

Thank you for your interest.

------------------------------------------
INTERNATIONAL  ANTI-PROHIBITIONIST  LEAGUE
-------------------------------------------

P.E. - REM 508  - 89 Rue BELLIARD - 1040 BRUXELLES - BELGIUM

Tel: (32)-2-230.4121 - Fax: (32)-2-230.3670 - Email:
<[i--l] at [igc.apc.org]>

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