Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/1999-11-18-Speech-4-283"

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"Mr President, as the rapporteur pointed out, the European Commission affirms that neither the regulatory instruments nor the programmes for the Action Plan on the fight against drugs 1995-1999 have been sufficiently assessed. It is therefore impossible to determine to what extent the objectives laid down have been met. Given that we are talking about the fight against drugs, the Commission’s Communication is not included on the agenda of the Court of Auditors or even OLAF, but on Parliament’s agenda. Therefore, illogically, you are preparing to reconfirm the previous plan’s strategies for the next five years. You will all agree – right as well as left – because when we discuss drugs you restrict yourselves to having simple differences of opinion, and no group is brave enough to put forward alternative strategies. Indeed, when drugs are under discussion, the vast majority of you renounce your role as a government Member who, when faced with a problem, takes a lead on the issue and tries to resolve it, and, if the solution does not provide positive results or is counterproductive, as in this case, adopts a different policy. You do not want to examine the possibility of changing the prohibitionist policy on drugs, because, when it comes to political choices, you impose moral convictions and beliefs which are a matter for each individual’s conscience. In short, on this subject, you prevent true, scientific, secular debate by choosing an ethical approach which proves to be frustrating, ineffective and disastrous: disastrous because you try to justify things with the lack of financial resources. But how much would it cost to eliminate drug trafficking, a trade that the United Nations says accounts for 8% of world trade? You refuse to carry out a cost-efficiency assessment because you would have to admit that with your policy you have handed over control of the production and trade in certain substances to a criminal monopoly. None of this surprises me: during this century crazy and incomprehensible things such as Nazism, Fascism and Communism have managed to gain power. Prohibition of drugs still remains: ethical, inhuman and anti-scientific madness."@en1

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