The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC)聽, released in June, outlines that the Australian use of the illegal drug聽聽is, per capita, the highest in the world. Sydney has long been known as the country鈥檚聽.听
There has been 聽in the streets, thought to be related to the cocaine trade, in which drug kingpins have been executed and others,聽, have been injured.
Sydneysiders continue to consume cocaine at growing rates, despite the distance to its South American source (which leads to聽), as well as the fact that much of it is of low quality as it is cut with numerous adulterants prior to its on-the-street sale.
罢丑别听聽noted that the importation of illicit drugs is the primary driver of organised crime in NSW. As it has already noted, despite numerous annual drug seizures at the border, local availability of imported illicit substances聽is .
Following the latest street drug execution on July 27, Greens MLC Cate Faehrmann wrote聽听蹿辞谤听迟丑别 Sydney Morning Herald, calling on Premier Chris Minns to consider the one approach that will 鈥渄rive organised drug gangs out of business overnight鈥 鈥 鈥渓egalisation鈥.
鈥淩ecreational or not, when you make it illegal to possess something that people want, you鈥檙e going to have a black market on your hands,鈥 Faehrmann who is the NSW Greens drug law reform spokesperson, wrote. She has been making this point about illicit substances since re-entering parliament in August 2018.
鈥淭he Australian Institute of Criminology says that organised crime costs Australia over $60 billion a year, much of which can be attributed to illegal drug activity and consequential activity like money laundering.鈥
Faehrmann pointed to a comment, made to the SMH by an unnamed NSW police source, who said: 鈥淭hese gangsters would be on Centrelink in six months if you legalised drugs.鈥
It reflects the growing community understanding, even within police that, rather than reduce illicit drug use, prohibition increases it while also creating crime networks and unnecessarily criminalising those who use drugs, and that the safest source of drugs is a legal one.
鈥淭hat black market is obviously of very high value to criminals,鈥 Faehrmann told (SCL). 鈥淚f we legalised cocaine, making it safely available for recreational use, that black market will cease to exist almost immediately.鈥
Legalisation reduces harm
Cocaine is not the usual go-to illicit substance in the legalisation debate. It is the relationship between the drug and the violent shootings聽that has led to Faehrmann pointing out the huge harm reduction that legal cocaine would lead to.
鈥淭here are a couple of reasons why cocaine isn鈥檛 really mentioned,鈥 Faehrmann told SCL. 鈥淧art of the reason is that there鈥檚 greater sentiment around legalising cannabis, so until that gets legalised first, there isn鈥檛 too much optimism around a campaign for cocaine legalisation.
鈥淎nother factor is that cocaine doesn鈥檛 really have a use in modern medicine, unlike cannabis and MDMA. So, cocaine is sort of seen purely as a recreational drug, without the additional reasons to legalise it.鈥
But, as Faehrmann stressed, regardless of how cocaine is used, there鈥檚 a huge market for it and people are being 鈥渟hot in broad daylight鈥 in relation to it. A clean, affordable and legal supply of cocaine would definitely result in less criminal activity and violence on the streets, and make its use a lot safer.
Calls for an end to the war on drugs have grown over the last decade since the聽聽declared it to be a failure in its first report, released in 2011, titled 鈥溾.
The significance of this report, and the 10 more since, is that the Global Commission is comprised of former heads of state and renowned public figures. In 2011, it included the former presidents of Mexico, Colombia and Brazil, as well as an ex-PM of Greece.
The report outlined that the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, the foundational treaty of modern drug prohibition, as well as the launch of its law enforcement arm in 1971, former US president Richard Nixon鈥檚 war on drugs has led to the opposite of its stated aims.
The commission, which is chaired today by former Aotearoa/New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark, outlined that prohibition has led to a rise in drug supply, the creation of huge international criminal networks, the increase in harms associated with drugs and the criminalisation of millions of otherwise law-abiding people.
We 鈥渆ncourage experimentation by governments with models of legal regulation of drugs to undermine the power of organised crime and safeguard the health and security of their citizens鈥, the commissioners wrote.
Dragging its feet
The Minns government won聽office after more than a decade of Coalition government during聽which community calls for the decriminalisation and legalisation of, what are today,聽illicit substances has grown. Coalition ministers' sloganising response was 鈥渏ust say no鈥 to drugs.
But the NSW聽聽and the聽聽have called for a different approach, including the decriminalisation of聽personal possession and use.
Minns has promised to put drug law reform on the agenda. But instead of acting on the advice of the two expert reports,聽 he has called for another drug summit at some point in the future.
鈥淚t鈥檚 unfortunate that we need a drug summit at all,鈥 Faehrmann said. 鈥淎ll the experts are saying that we鈥檝e got the insight we need for best practice drug law reform through鈥 the inquiry and the inquest. 鈥淵et here we are being told that we need a drug summit鈥 and 鈥渁t the same time, we can鈥檛 get an indication of when the summit will commence鈥.
Since the last summit in 1999, the ACT Labor Greens government聽聽legalised the personal possession and use of cannabis, as well as implementing pill testing. It will decriminalise the most popular聽聽in October.
When the summit 鈥渋nevitably does commence鈥 Faehrmann said she hopes it 鈥渓ooks to broader issues that weren鈥檛 recommended by the ice inquiry, like pill testing and legal regulation of cocaine鈥.
[This article was first published at .]