From:TheBahamasWeekly.com
OAS Secretary General Presented Drug Report in London
By OAS
Jul 30, 2013 - 11:27:13 PM
The
Secretary General of the Organization of American States (OAS), José
Miguel Insulza, today presented in London the Report on the Drug Problem
in the Americas, during a forum organized by Chatham House in which
political authorities and experts in the issue took part.
Under the title “The OAS Report on the Drug Problem in the
Americas: What Next?” the British think tank offered a discussion forum
which featured the participation of Luis Fernando Carrera Castro,
Foreign Minister of Guatemala; Vanda Felbab-Brown, Senior Fellow from
the Brookings Institution; Mike Trace, Chair of the International Drug
Policy Consortium; and Patricia Lewis, Research Director on
International Security at Chatham House.
Summarizing the objective of the document produced under his
guidance by a team of analysts and international experts, Secretary
General expressed his hope that “this Report and the ideas put forth in
it serve not as a conclusion, but as the initiation of a dialogue on the
matter.” Looking toward the future, he emphasized the need for an “open
and informed” debate on drug policy, and described an important role
for the Organization in the promotion of that debate. “The OAS, as
directed by the resolution passed by the General Assembly this past
June, will consult with national, sub-regional and international
partners, civil society groups, think tanks, technical expert meetings,
academia and forums such as this one to promote this discussion and draw
conclusions that can be used as feedback for a coming Extraordinary
General Assembly Meeting in 2014 on the topic,” said the Secretary
General.
The leader of the hemispheric institution recalled that the
mandate given to the OAS by the Heads of State and Government of the
region at the Summit of the Americas in 2012 was to “analyze the results
of the present drug policies in the Americas and to explore new
approaches to strengthen this struggle and make it more effective.” To
that end, he explained, the OAS delivered the Report to the Heads of
State in May.
The Secretary General explained that the document consists of two parts: the Analytical Report,
explaining the reasons that have caused concern in society about drug
consumption and which have led to attempts to control the effects of
drugs on human health; and the Scenarios Report,
an examination of the paths that the phenomenon could take in the
Hemisphere in the coming years. He noted that the study does not make
recommendations, but rather is an analysis of what has occurred to the
present in the struggle against drugs and describes possible future
situations.
In the first part, said Insulza “we follow this process,
tracking the course of illicit activity from the cultivation of crops,
to the production of drugs, their distribution or transit along routes
and the violence accompanying it, through to their sale and end-use.” He
added that, “in undertaking this study, we examined the volume of
activity, its various manifestations, its environmental impact, and the
State's response to it, including the consequences and limitations of
that response.”
In the second part, he said "three of the four scenarios
–“Together,” “Pathways” and “Resilience”- describe different future
alternatives, depending on whether the focus is largely on institution
building, experimentation with legal changes, or the community's
capacity to respond to the problem. The fourth, "Disruption," alerts us
to what could happen if we are incapable in the short run of reaching a
shared vision that allows us to join forces to address the problem,
while respecting diversity in our approaches to it.”
In terms of the conclusions of the Report, the OAS Secretary
General explained that there are four: the problem must be dealt with
taking into account each country’s different situation; countries with
fewer resources and less institutional strength have more difficulty
dealing with the impact of drug trafficking; the phenomenon requires a
public health approach; and the approach to the problem must be
multifaceted, flexible, taking into account differences, and the
countries of the regions must be united in their diversity.
For more information, please visit the OAS Website at www.oas.org.
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