Aussies
Spending
$7
Billion
Per
Year
on
Illegal
Drugs:
Report
notes
failure
of
Prohibition
10/11/97
In a report released this week, Access Economics, a respected private
sector analysis firm in Australia, finds that citizens of that country
are spending approximately $7 billion per year on illicit drugs. This figure
represents 1.4% of Australia's GNP and is greater than the amount spent
on tobacco products ($6.2 billion). The report indicates that Cannabis
accounts for approximately 70% of the total.
"Prohibition of drugs has not prevented widespread use and has
created a criminal run industry which corrupts law enforcement agencies"
the report says.
-- END --
Issue #15, 10/11/97
Media Alert: CNN covering Vancouver's Marc Emery Tomorrow (Sunday night) | First Federally Sponsored Med Mj Research Research Approved | Clinton AIDS Advisors Consider Resignation in Protest of Federal Ban on Needle Exchange Funding | Interview with Alexander Robinson | FBI Report Shows a Record Year for Marijuana Busts | American Medical Association Calls for More Rational Drug Policies | Canadian Ambassador to Mexico Steps Down | Hung Jury for Hawaiian Activist Charged with Buying Legal Hempseed | BC Canada's Attorney General Calls for an Examination of Decriminalization | Aussies Spending $7 Billion Per Year on Illegal Drugs: Report notes failure of Prohibition | 1997 Miss America Calls for Needle Exchange | Quote of the Week: Prominent drug policy researcher calls CASA's work thin | Link of the Week: Expose of some of CASA's thinness | Editorial: The voices of reform are growing louder... whether or not the Drug Warriors want to hear them
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