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Filipinos arrested during a drug-buying operation wait to be brought to a police station for verification at a slum area in Manila in September 2016. According to the Philippine government, President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs had resulted in more than 5,000 deaths at the end of 2018, though opposition politicians and human rights groups place the toll as high as 20,000. Photo: EPA
Opinion
José Ramos-Horta
José Ramos-Horta

From the Philippines to Indonesia and Afghanistan, Asia’s brutal drug policies have failed

  • Ten years of heavy-handed drug policy has not lowered use but it has increased the misery for addicts and for those who enter the trade out of economic necessity. It’s time for a new strategy
Asia is characterised by some of the world’s harshest approaches to combating illicit use of drugs, an almost entirely one-dimensional security approach as opposed to a more integrated humane, political, social and security approach. The victims are mainly the urban and rural poor at the end of the chain, not the well-armed drug barons with the means to protect themselves.

Have draconian measures such as extrajudicial killings, the death penalty for drug offences, compulsory detention for people who use drugs and, in some cases, corporal punishment meted out by caning, achieved the stated goal of reducing drug demand and supply in the region? Can countries in Asia claim progress is being made towards the goal of a “drug-free” region?

These are important questions that governments must answer as the 10-year global drug strategy adopted at the United Nations in 2009 comes to its end. In March, governments are set to meet at a high-level UN meeting in Vienna to review progress made over the past decade and define future directions for global drug policy.
The so-called “war on drugs” has persisted for decades without an honest assessment by governments of its effectiveness, nor its impacts, despite UN reports showing ever-increasing drug markets year on year, as well as many harmful consequences. In a report on the past decade of drug policy in Asia released on Wednesday, the International Drug Policy Consortium presents a comprehensive assessment that portrays a grim reality.
The UN has reported a 167 per cent increase in the production of opium in Afghanistan and a 29 per cent increase in Myanmar since 2009. Seizures of methamphetamine tablets have increased nine-fold from 2008 to 2015. These trends reflect high levels of demand and increasing sophistication by drug traffickers, while showing the utter ineffectiveness of waging costly drug wars that overwhelmingly prioritise the use of law enforcement at the expense of public health and human rights.
Afghan children sit next to a poppy field in the Argo district of Badakhshan province in June 2018. The US government has spent billions of dollars on a war to eliminate drugs from Afghanistan, but the country still remains the world's top opium producer. Photo: AFP

Over the past decade, the use of drugs, along with its associated health risks and deaths, have surged in Asia. The UN reports an almost 100 per cent increase from 2011 to 2018 in the use of amphetamines. The rates of prevalence of HIV, viral hepatitis and tuberculosis among people who inject drugs in Asia remain disproportionately high compared with other regions of the world, and have seen no overall decrease since 2009. Although the reported number of drug-related deaths has fallen from 104,116 in 2011 to 66,100 in 2016, it is important to note that data on drug-related mortality remains scarce and of poor quality, with no systematic reporting of overdose deaths in any country in the region.

Many others have died from targeted killings, including during law enforcement operations, numbering up to 20,000 in the Philippines alone since President Rodrigo Duterte’s declaration of a war on people who use drugs and trafficking, in 2016. Although on a lesser scale, the number of people killed in drug enforcement operations has also risen sharply in Indonesia (99 people in 2017, an alarming increase from 16 such deaths in 2016), as well as in Bangladesh (over 400 people killed since May 2018). In addition, almost half of the countries worldwide that retain the death penalty for drug offences are in Asia (16 out of 33), with Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and the Philippines taking steps to re-institute or expand its use.
If people are not killed for engaging in drug-related activities, many of them are locked up in overcrowded prisons, detention facilities and so-called “drug rehabilitation centres”. Where data is available, it shows that many people in prison are held for non-violent drug offences, for example in Indonesia (58 per cent), Thailand (72 per cent) and the Philippines (58 per cent). This proportion is often greater for women, including in Thailand where over 80 per cent of women in prison are incarcerated for a drug offence. Despite years of Asian governments claiming a shift towards a health approach to drug use, over 450,000 people are currently being held in compulsory detention centres in China, Vietnam, Cambodia, the Philippines, Malaysia, Laos, Singapore and Thailand.

As in any war, the impacts of repressive drug policies in Asia are felt far and wide, not only by people who use drugs and people engaged in supply, but also their families and the wider community. In particular, the high level of women imprisoned for drug offences has damaging effects on their children and family cohesion. There is a growing recognition that women are exploited in the illicit drug trade as couriers and do so out of economic necessity, desperation or coercion, and are therefore expendable – making it apparent that imprisonment and harsh punishment cannot suppress the driving factors behind ever-expanding drug markets.

National Anti-Drugs Agency officers burn marijuana confiscated from drug dealers during a drugs destruction operation in Banda Aceh, Indonesia, in July 2018. Photo: EPA-EFE

In the face of this damning report card on drug policies, it is not surprising that governments are reluctant to openly evaluate whether progress has been made towards regional and global goals of eliminating the illicit drug trade. The truth they must confront is that drug markets have proved impervious to sustained efforts to reduce demand or supply, while the human cost of brutally punitive policies is far greater than any harm from drugs themselves.

This March, at the UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs, it will be a serious neglect of duty if Asian governments do not openly acknowledge that violent law enforcement strategies and harsh punishments have failed, not only to achieve the stated policy objectives but also to establish evidence-based responses to drug use that save lives. Continued denial of this truth is a worrying recipe for more lives lost in the increasingly deadly war on drugs across Asia.

José Ramos-Horta is former president of East Timor, a Nobel Peace Prize Laureate and member of the Global Commission on Drug Policy 

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Asia must face the truth its brutal drugs war has failed
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