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<title>A Duty to Censor</title>
<link>http://www.reason.com/news/show/30722.html</link>
<description> &lt;p&gt;
In a TV ad that aired worldwide in May, a cleaning woman walks down the hall of
the United Nations headquarters in New York. As she approaches the globe in the
front of the General Assembly's meeting room, the narrator talks about the
organization's 20th Special Session: &quot;On June the 8th, leaders from 185
countries will gather in this room for three days to talk about drugs.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
The cleaning woman, beginning with her rag on Thailand, spritzes the globe and
&quot;wipes it free of drugs.&quot; Her rag becomes a squadron of helicopters spraying
fields with herbicide. We see images of high-tech radar equipment,
drug-sniffing dogs, and flaming drug laboratories, offset by two classroom
shots representing anti-drug education. The narrator concludes: &quot;Three
days...this room...and a world of good. A drug-free world...we can do it.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
The U.N.'s anti-drug apparatus--which includes the Drug Control Program, the
Commission on Narcotic Drugs, and the International Narcotics Control Board
(INCB)--seeks to wipe the world free of dissent as well as drugs. The INCB's
1997 report calls for criminalizing opposition to the war on drugs. The nations
of the world have not followed through on that recommendation yet, but the
spirit behind it has helped prevent a genuine international debate about drug
policy. &lt;p&gt;
Based on the 1988 U.N. Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and
Psychotropic Substances, the INCB claims that all nations are obliged to enact
laws that prohibit inciting or inducing people &quot;by any means&quot; to &quot;use narcotic
drugs or psychotropic substances illicitly.&quot; According to the INCB's report,
offenders include anyone who &quot;shows illicit use in a favourable light&quot; or who
advocates &quot;a change in the drug law.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
The report criticizes &quot;reputable medical journals&quot; for &quot;favouring the `medical'
use of cannabis,&quot; since &quot;such information... tends to generate an overall
climate of acceptance that is favourable to&quot; illegal drug use. It also attacks
the marketing of nonpsychoactive hemp products, such as clothing and
foodstuffs, for &quot;contributing to the overall promotion of illicit drugs.&quot; &lt;p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
The INCB even suggests that political campaigns based on calls for drug policy
reform may be prohibited under international treaties: &quot;Election campaigns have
been conducted with candidates standing for parliament on a drug legalization
platform. Some of the candidates for the European Parliament stood on such a
platform and were successful. Thus, they were able to use their access and
influence to win others over to their cause. Some campaigns, such as the
successful campaigns for the `medical' use of cannabis in Arizona and
California in the United States of America, have sought to change the law....&lt;p&gt;
&quot;The Board notes with regret that despite the fact that...Governments of States
that are parties to the 1988 Convention are required to make the incitement or
inducement to take drugs a criminal offence, either this has not been done or
the law has not been enforced. Prominent people have issued some very public
calls to take drugs and have not been prosecuted.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
The new director of the U.N. Drug Control Program, Pino Arlacchi, has followed
up on the 1997 report by attacking European Commissioner for Humanitarian
Affairs Emma Bonino, an advocate of drug policy reform. In a March letter to
Jacques Santer, president of the European Commission, Arlacchi questioned
Bonino's status: &quot;I wish to raise the critical issue of the compatibility of
Ms. Bonino's behaviour with the role and functions of a top official of the
European Commission,&quot; he wrote. &quot;Her main objective seems to be to ridicule the
efforts undertaken&quot; by the Drug Control Program. In response, Santer wrote to
U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan, arguing that it is perfectly appropriate for
a European commissioner to consider &quot;fundamental questions about the
principles, objectives and modalities of the war on drugs.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch, noted that the Drug
Control Program's position on dissenters has sweeping implications. &quot;Many
people...do not share the views about drugs reflected in the U.N. drug
conventions and the antinarcotics efforts of many member states,&quot; he said in an
April letter to the members of the INCB. &quot;Would the [INCB] have member states
criminalize advocacy of medical marijuana or of the decriminalization of
possession of small amounts of marijuana? Would it have states impose criminal
sanctions on people who write books about the sacred truths they have allegedly
received from ingesting hallucinogens? Does it really support carting musicians
off to jail if their songs are deemed to glamorize drugs?&quot; For anyone who
values freedom of expression, the INCB's blithe advocacy of worldwide
censorship is pretty scary.&lt;p&gt;
But a more immediate threat is the suppression of politically incorrect views
within the U.N. itself. The World Health Organization removed a section from a
recent report on marijuana concluding that the drug's hazards pale beside those
of tobacco and alcohol. WHO said the section was dropped because &quot;the
reliability and public health significance of such comparisons are doubtful.&quot;
The lead researcher, Robin Room of Canada's Addiction Research Foundation,
disagreed. &quot;In my view,&quot; he wrote in &lt;em&gt;The &lt;/em&gt;(Toronto)&lt;em&gt; Globe and
Mail&lt;/em&gt;, &quot;enough is known for such comparisons to be useful.&quot; The real concern
seemed to be the potential reaction from U.N. drug control officials. One
source familiar with the controversy says the view at the Drug Control Program
is that &quot;anyone who wants to make comparisons [between marijuana and licit
drugs] is a legalizer.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
Another case of WHO censorship involved research on coca. In 1994, after two
years of research in 19 countries, a group of well-respected investigators
concluded that coca leaf chewing is not addictive. They also found that most
cocaine users consume very little of the drug and experience few serious
problems. The results were summarized in a March 1995 press release. In May
1995, according to official WHO records, the organization's U.S.
representative, Neil&lt;strong&gt; &lt;/strong&gt;Boyer,&lt;strong&gt; &lt;/strong&gt;&quot;took the view that the study on
cocaine...indicates that [WHO's] programme on substance abuse was headed in the
wrong direction&quot; and that &quot;if WHO activities relating to drugs failed to
reinforce proven drug control approaches, funds for the relevant programmes
should be curtailed.&quot;&lt;strong&gt; &lt;/strong&gt;The full results of the study were never
released.&lt;p&gt;
The response to that project was reminiscent of an incident that occurred
nearly half a century ago. In 1950, when he found out that the Navy was
investigating the use of coca to prevent muscular fatigue, Harry Anslinger,
director of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, wrote to the principal researcher.
&quot;The fact that a domestic scientific project was in progress in the United
States, involving the study of the effect of chewing of coca leaves on fatigue,
would have a most unfortunate effect on our efforts to achieve international
agreement on limitation of production of the leaves,&quot; Anslinger said in a
letter uncovered by historian Paul Gootenberg. &quot;I therefore must strongly urge
that that part of the project involving the use of coca leaves be abandoned.&quot;
It was.&lt;p&gt;
U.S. officials continue to lead the international fight against deviation from
the official line on drugs. According to staff members at the U.N. Drug Control
Program, the INCB's U.S. representative, Herbert Okun, has played a vital role
in developing the U.N.'s censorship standards. That role is not surprising,
given the attitude of U.S. drug warriors toward American dissenters.&lt;p&gt;
In December 1996, a month after California and Arizona voters legalized the
medical use of marijuana, Attorney General Janet Reno, drug czar Barry
McCaffrey, and Drug Enforcement Administration Director Thomas Constantine
announced that the federal government would punish any doctor who recommended
marijuana to a patient. A group of California physicians challenged the policy
as a violation of the First Amendment, and they won a temporary injunction from
a federal judge. A year later, when television character Murphy Brown smoked
marijuana to relieve the nausea brought on by cancer chemotherapy, Constantine
promised to investigate &quot;if any laws were broken.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
By trying to silence skeptical voices, drug warriors further weaken their
authority and credibility. Perhaps sensing that such an approach is
counterproductive, the conservative Finnish delegation to the Commission on
Narcotic Drugs rejected the conclusions of the INCB's 1997 report. &quot;Finland
represents a very restrictive drug policy line,&quot; it said. &quot;We consider,
however, that it would be unfair to label all those who are of a different
opinion as being in favour of drugs. If we feel that we are the losers in the
debate with the free press, it is best to check our own arguments.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;</description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">30722@http://www.reason.com</guid>
<pubDate>Sat, 01 Aug 1998 00:00:00 EDT</pubDate><author>info@reason.com (Paul O. Coffin)</author>
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