Ex-Mexico president calls for legalizing drugs
Ex-Mexico president calls for legalizing drugs
By E. EDUARDO CASTILLO
(AP)
–
16 hours ago
MEXICO CITY — Former President Vicente Fox is joining with those
urging his successor to legalize drugs in Mexico, saying that could
break the economic power of the country's brutal drug cartels.
Fox's
comments, posted Sunday on his blog, came less than a week after
President Felipe Calderon agreed to open the door to discussions about
the legalization of drugs, even though he stressed that he remained
opposed to the idea.
Fox said places that have implemented the legalization strategy have not seen significant increases in drug use.
"We
should consider legalizing the production, distribution and sale of
drugs," wrote Fox, who was president from 2000 to 2006 and is a member
of Calderon's conservative National Action Party. "Radical prohibition
strategies have never worked."
"Legalizing in this sense does not
mean drugs are good and don't harm those who consume them," he wrote.
"Rather we should look at it as a strategy to strike at and break the
economic structure that allows gangs to generate huge profits in their
trade, which feeds corruption and increases their areas of power."
He
said the government could tax the sale of legalized drugs to finance
programs for reducing addiction and rehabilitating users.
Fox also
called for the quick withdrawal of the military from public security
work, a measure Calderon ordered when he succeeded Fox in December 2006
and stepped up a crackdown on the cartels.
Fox, who left office
with low popularity, has been criticized by some Mexicans for
implementing an anti-cartel strategy aimed at arresting the gangs'
leaders.
The approach led to power vacuums that fed fighting among
rival cartels, bringing violence that has killed more than 28,000
people since Calderon took office. The government says the largest
number of victims have been tied to gangs.
Fox wrote that drug
violence has damaged "the perception and image of the country, and
economic activity, particularly in tourism and foreign investment."
Mexico
already has some of the world's most liberal laws for drug users, after
eliminating jail time for possessing small amounts of marijuana,
cocaine and even heroin, LSD and methamphetamine in 2009.
In Latin
America, several countries have decriminalized possession of small
amounts of some drugs for personal use, but legalization has made little
headway in the region.
The issue came up at public forum on crime
attended by Calderon in Mexico City on Tuesday, where analyst and
writer Hector Aguilar Camin said Mexico should take steps toward
legalizing "all drugs in general."
"It's a fundamental debate in
which I think, first of all, you must allow a democratic plurality (of
opinions)," Calderon said. "You have to analyze carefully the pros and
cons and the key arguments on both sides."
Hours later, Calderon's
office issued a statement saying that while the president was open to
debate on the issue, he remained "against the legalization of drugs."
In
his blog, Fox harshly criticized rampant drug violence, writing that
"the first responsibility of a government is to provide security for the
people and their possessions ... today, we find that, unfortunately,
the Mexican government is not complying with that responsibility."
The city most affected by drug violence has been Ciudad Juarez, which lies across the border from El Paso, Texas.
Four
senior federal police commanders in Ciudad Juarez were removed from
their posts after subordinates accused them of having links to drug
traffickers.
The action by the Public Safety Department came just
hours after 200 federal police officers detained one of their superiors
at gunpoint Saturday, alleging he had connections to drug cartels and
participated in kidnappings, killings and extortion.
The
department said in a statement late Saturday that the commander held by
officers earlier in the day was being transferred to Mexico City along
with three other officials. All will be investigated for "possible
irregular conduct," it said.