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SOC/NAR/855

UN COMMISSION PRESENTED WITH ‘SIGNS OF PROGRESS’ IN GLOBAL COUNTER-NARCOTIC EFFORTS

08/04/2003
Press Release
SOC/NAR/855


UN COMMISSION PRESENTED WITH ‘SIGNS OF PROGRESS’

IN GLOBAL COUNTER-NARCOTIC EFFORTS


(Reissued as received.)


VIENNA, 8 April (UN Information Service) -- The Commission on Narcotic Drugs (CND), the central United Nations policy-making body dealing with drug-related issues, has opened its forty-sixth session in Vienna today.  The last two days of this year's session, 16-17 April, have been reserved for the ministerial level discussion of the progress made towards meeting the goals of the Ten-Year Action Plan Against Illicit Drugs, approved in 1998 by the United Nations General Assembly.


As of yesterday, 116 countries have confirmed their participation, with

75 of them represented at the ministerial level.


The first speaker in the opening session -- chaired by the Under-Secretary for Global Affairs in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Mexico, Ms. Patricia Olamendi -- was the President of the United NationsGeneral Assembly Mr. Jan Kavan, who emphasized “a sense of shared responsibility” in global counter-narcotic efforts.


“In recent years, efforts to reduce abuse of illicit drugs have shown signs of progress”, Antonio Maria Costa, the Executive Director of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, said in a report submitted to the Commission.


Citing the areas of “encouraging progress towards still distant goals”,

Mr. Costa emphasized the positive experiences in four major elements of the international drug policy.  In the overall drug control policy -- the key is to balance interventions to reduce supply with those to reduce demand.  In demand reduction -- there is a substantial body of evidence that prevention, treatment and rehabilitation work.  In supply reduction -- promising results have been achieved in the reduction of areas under opium poppy and coca bush cultivation with the introduction of alternative development strategies providing farmers licit means of livelihood.  In international cooperation -- the experience of the past five years proves that drug control on the global level only works when all countries operate within the common framework of international law:  “Otherwise, problems are only pushed around, from one country to another, in a zero-sum game”, Costa said.


Based on governments’ reports -- and for this year's session 117 governments have submitted their responses to an UNODC biennial questionnaire -- action plans


and measures adopted in 1998 served as a catalyst for action in implementation of the international drug control treaties.  They became a global point of reference, giving the governments of the States most affected by the illegal drugs over the past three decades a sense of a common approach to a common problem.  Now they see their national efforts integrated in -- and supported by -- the global strategy against illicit drugs.


Following the 1998 session -- 86 per cent of the governments have adopted their national drug control strategies to include the goals set by the General Assembly;


-- 87 per cent of countries have established a central coordination entity for the implementation of the national drug strategies;


-- 82 per cent of the governments have incorporated the drug demand reduction into their strategies, with an emphasis on coordination of law enforcement, treatment and social integration programmes, resulting in a more balanced approach with a greater emphasis on demand reduction;


-- 83 per cent of the States have launched information campaigns.  Over the next two weeks, the Commission will also discuss new challenges encountered in recent years, including the dramatic increase in injecting drug use-related HIV/AIDS cases -- especially along drug trafficking routes -- as well as the spread of synthetic drugs worldwide.


In addition to the general debate, there are four round-table discussions planned during the ministerial segment on 16-17 April:


-- Challenges, new trends and patterns of the world drug problem;

-- Countering illicit drug supply;

-- Strengthening international cooperation in countering the world drug    problem, based on the principle of shared responsibility; and

-- Demand reduction and preventive policies.


Parallel to that, four ancillary meetings will be held, enabling technical experts attending the ministerial segment to discuss technical issues (Inter-Regional Drug Trafficking -- the Challenge to Effective Drug Law Enforcement; HIV/AIDS and Drug Abuse; Drug Abuse Treatment and Rehabilitation; and Successful Alternative Development -- How It Works.


During the forty-sixth session of the CND, the Vienna non-governmental organization (NGO) Committee on Narcotic Drugs will hold two forum discussions on the 9 and 16 April.


On 14 April, a Swedish NGO Hassela Nordic Network -- a network for national and international exchange of drug-related information and anti-drug action -- will present to Antonio Maria Costa, Executive Director of UNODC, and to CND President, the Under-Secretary for Global Affairs in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Mexico, Patricia Olamendi, 1 million signatures collected since November 2002 by young people from 48 countries in support of international


counter-narcotic efforts.  Their view is:  “We are the future, and we say 'No'!”  A representative group of young persons from Austria, Italy and Sweden will represent the million signatories.


For more information, please contact:  Kemal Kurspahic, Spokesman, tel.:  (43-1) 26060 5629 or 4116, fax:  (43-1) 26060 5875, e-mail:  kemal.kurspahic@unodc.org


United Nations Information Service Vienna (UNIS), P.O.Box 500, A-1400 Vienna, Austria, tel.:  (+43-1) 26060 4666, fax:  (+43-1) 26060 5899, e-mail:  UNIS@unvienna.org.  Visit our homepage:  www.unis.unvienna.org


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For information media. Not an official record.