reconsiDer: TIDBIT
Until last year Mo Mowlam was
the "drug Czar" of Great Britain. At first , a staunch prohibitionist, Ms.
Mowlam learned on the job, changed her opinions, and was one of the first
government ministers to call for serious reform of the marijuana laws in the UK.
Now she goes even farther, citing the "war against terrorism" as yet another
reason to legalize drugs.
LEGALISE ALL DRUGS
WORLDWIDE, SAYS MOWLAM
Mo Mowlam, the former cabinet
minister responsible for drugs policy, is
calling for the international
legalisation of the drugs trade as part of a
more effective drive to combat
terrorism.
Writing in the Guardian today, Ms Mowlam says: "Rather than
bombing
civilians in various Muslim countries, the United States and Britain
should
begin to take a more intelligent approach to the international drugs
trade,
namely to legalise it internationally."
Ms Mowlam, already an
advocate of the legalisation of cannabis in Britain,
is unlikely to find her
latest proposal embraced by Downing Street but she
will find support from
some drugs specialists, who believe the battle to
stop trafficking, with its
inextricable links with terrorism, cannot succeed
through mere
suppression.
In her article she joins another ex-cabinet minister, Chris
Smith, in
questioning the need to topple Saddam Hussein, arguing instead that
an
effort to neutralise the illegal trade will do more to win the war
against
terrorism.
She points out that the international drugs trade
is estimated to be worth
around $400bn a year, representing about 8% of world
trade. She suggests
that legalisation and regulation of the trade, requiring
international
action, will isolate the terrorists.
She also cites
Republicans within the US administration, some of them in the
state
department, who admit that terrorist groups are increasingly using
drug
trafficking as a source of revenue.
She writes: "Drugs and terrorism are
linked and are set to become more so.
Legalisation of drugs would stop this
connection: it would begin to solve
many of the problems caused by drugs
today and would isolate the
terrorists".
Ms Mowlam stood down as MP
for Redcar last year, partly due to her
frustration at the government's
slowness in moving to a softer line on drugs
issues.
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