EU AIDE ARGUES FOR LEGALIZING DRUGS
Agence France-Presse
PARIS The European commissioner for consumer policy, Emma Bonino,
called Wednesday for certain drugs to be legalized after an EU
report indicated that up to a million Europeans take heroin.
Mrs. Bonino reiterated her view that banning drugs led only to
black market dealing and that legalizing them along the lines
taken by the Netherlands would lead to a reduction in
drug-related crime.
"If the trade became official, in a form which must be defined,
it would deprive organized crime of an important source of
revenue," she said in an interview in the Paris daily newspaper
Le Parisien.
"And if drugs became available for a reasonable price, it would
decrease violence by drug addicts to fund their habit," added
Mrs. Bonino, a member of the Italian Radical Party.
She was speaking after the first report by the European Drugs
Observatory about drug-taking across the Continent said that up
to one million Europeans use heroin.
The report, published in Brussels on Tuesday, said that about I
percent of the European Union's adult population had used heroin
and that 0.5 percent were addicts.
The proportion of Europe's population that had used illegal
drugs, mainly marijuana, varied from 5 percent to 16 percent in
member states, the report added.
Mrs. Bonino argued that liberal Dutch legislation was a good
example to follow. President Jacques Chirac of France, however,
has objected to the Dutch drugs policy.
"Dutch legislation has produced excellent results," she said.
"There is less crime and less delinquency. Drug addicts are
registered, and there are far fewer people infected with AIDS
than elsewhere in Europe."
She compared opposition to drug liberalization to the fight
against abortion. "Everyone knows that the probibitionists' legal
arsenal is empty, but nobody wants to start the debate and
consider alternative solutions," she said.
Mrs. Bonino insisted that she was against drugs, saying that she
wanted to tackle the problem in a pragmatic way. "We are making
it into a moral question. But I think the state is not there to
save souls."