Europe: Moscow Mayor Calls for Harsh Drug Laws Including Death Penalty

Submitted by Phillip Smith on (Issue #470)
Consequences of Prohibition
Drug War Issues
Politics & Advocacy

Moscow Mayor Yury Luzhkov called Monday for drug dealers to be "destroyed" during a speech to law enforcement and city offficials at the Moscow headquarters of the Federal Drug Control Service, according to an account in the Moscow Times. Luzkhov suggested Russia implement drug laws like those in Singapore, where drug traffickers face execution.

[inline:moscow1.gif align=right]"In Singapore, there is no drug addiction," he said. "Let us do the same." Luzkhov somewhat wistfully noted that "these days, a democratic government does not accept" a draconian drug policy like Singapore's, but added that Russia should "accept something close to it."

But Russia has gone in the other direction in recent years. Since 2004, when a new law decriminalized simple drug possession, official drug policy has been to go after traffickers and sellers, but not users. Apparently, the increased penalties for drug dealers and traffickers under the 2004 law is not enough for Luzkhov, and the decriminalization of drug possession sticks in the craw of Russian narcs. The Federal Drug Control Service has fought bitterly to reinstate penalties against small-time possessors, first attempting to subvert the new law's intent by defining personal use quantities at ridiculously low levels, such as 0.01 grams of heroin. Instead, the personal use quantity was set at one gram, but in a small victory for the drug warriors, that was cut back to half a gram last year.

Drug use has been on the rise in Russia and other republics of the former Soviet Union since its dissolution. The country registers several hundred thousand "drug addicts" each year, with the real number being likely much greater. An estimated 70,000 Russians die from drug overdoses each year, and injection drug use is involved in many of the country's hundreds of thousands of AIDS cases.

While officials like Mayor Luzkhov see only greater repression as the answer, non-governmental organizations like New Drug Policy seek to balance the hardliners by lobbying for reasonable harm reduction policies. "Using a drug is not a criminal offense," said the group's Lev Levinson in response to the mayor's remarks. "It is punishable only by a fine. The mayor, Levinson said, had cast an envious glance on Singapore's harsh policy for at least a decade.

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Comments

Anonymous (not verified)

Whether it's Russia, the USA, China, or elsewhere, it seems like the threat of global fascism is an historical and irreversible high. It may take a world war between the major powers to finally reverse this global police state cloud enveloping us all. There does seem to be some positive movement towards freedom in South America, but the fascist long arm of the global powers reaches everywhere.

Fri, 01/26/2007 - 11:52am Permalink
Anonymous (not verified)

When I see articles like the above 'Moscow Mayor Calls For Harsh...', I write a quick note to the government tourist office and tell them that I do not spend my time and vacation dollars in cities/countries that harrass and/or kill drug dealers and drug users.

Sun, 02/04/2007 - 10:05am Permalink

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