Un autre front est une guerre perdue d’avance: les droits humains et la politique des drogues en Afrique

Actualités

Un autre front est une guerre perdue d’avance: les droits humains et la politique des drogues en Afrique

13 juin 2014

Cette présentation analyse les leçons, incluant les facteurs reliés aux droits humains, qui pourraient informer les stratégies de contrôle des drogues en Afrique. Pour en savoir plus, en anglais, veuillez lire les informations ci-dessous.

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Sub-Saharan Africa has emerged as a new front in the global struggle for control of illicit drugs. Significant trafficking routes of drugs from Asia and Latin America criss-cross the continent, benefiting in some cases from weakly supervised borders and ports.

Africa also has some of the most repressive national drug laws in the world, many of them dating from the 1960s, and hundreds of thousands of people are in pre-trial detention or other state custody for minor drug offenses. The UN Office on Drugs and Crime and the government of the United States -- two heavyweight players on the global drug control scene -- both see opportunities for replicating in Africa the human rights-unfriendly drug-control approaches used in Latin America. Both also invoke links between drugs and terrorism as a justification for a militarised response to drugs. This talk will consider the lessons, including human rights-related factors, that should inform drug control strategies in Africa.

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