04) WRONG
ON
CRIME
(The following article
is from the
June 16-30, 2009, issue of People's Voice, Canada's leading communist
newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the source is credited.
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People's Voice Editorial
Hungry for power, Liberal leader Michael
Ignatieff is helping the
Harper Tories to pass Bill C-15, under which people convicted of
"serious" drug crimes will automatically face prison terms of six
months or longer. But as the expert witnesses called to speak to this
legislation pointed out, the law will simply jam more people into
over-crowded prisons, while doing nothing to address the health crisis
related to drug abuse.
Ignatieff's move has angered many Liberals who
understand the
facts about drugs and the legal system. But Iggy seems terrified that
he might be called "soft on crime."
Anyone who still thinks that mandatory
incarceration will reduce
drug abuse should look south of the border, where 100,000 more
non-violent offenders rot in jails than in the entire European Union.
The "war on drugs" has certainly padded the profits of the drug lords -
but it hasn't reduced drug use.
And consider the health implications of C-15.
Research shows that
the incarceration of injection drug users is a factor driving Canada's
worsening HIV epidemic. The number of HIV cases in Canadian prisons has
risen by 35 percent in the last five years, and a recent study found
that 21 percent of all HIV infections among Vancouver injection drug
users may have been acquired in prison. Expanding the prison population
is a sure-fire way to accelerate the spread of HIV and hepatitis C in
Canada.
How about the financial burden of C-15? Every
study comparing
treatment to incarceration shows that the cost of treating HIV and
hepatitis C as a health problem is far cheaper than the expense of
locking up drug users for lengthy periods.
Some still believe that society can simply
lock up the "bad guys"
and throw away the key. But it won't work, and it will cost far more
than treating drug abuse as a health matter. C-15 is another step
toward a society where the state has sweeping powers to jail entire
sections of the population. That's called fascism, and Michael
Ignatieff must be reminded that C-15 is not acceptable.