On International Human Rights Day, UN drugs body silences UN human rights expert on ground-breaking report

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On International Human Rights Day, UN drugs body silences UN human rights expert on ground-breaking report

10 December 2021
Harm Reduction International (HRI)

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

On International Human Rights Day, UN drugs body silences UN human rights expert on ground-breaking report

Friday, 10 December 2021 (Vienna, Austria) - In an unprecedented, last-minute decision, the lead UN drugs body has blocked the presentation of a report from a group of independent human rights experts that calls out governments for serious human rights abuses committed in the war on drugs.

The UN’s lead drug policy-making body has slammed the door on human rights expert Dr Elina Steinerte, Chair of the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, who was due to present a watershed study on how drug control policies drive an epidemic of arbitrary detention across the world. She has been blocked from addressing the UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs today, 10th December, which is coincidentally International Human Rights Day, and her statement has been merely published online. This last-minute decision, which led to a contentious exchange during the session, was reached through an opaque, closed-door process that kept the human rights experts in the dark about their exclusion until today.

The report sheds light on the arrest and incarceration of millions of people around the world for drug-related offences, including for drug use. People who use drugs are also routinely held against their will in so-called ‘rehab centres’, where they are often subject to degrading and inhumane treatment, including forced labour. With today’s decision, the Commission on Narcotic Drugs stands in defiance of the Human Rights Council - the main UN human rights body - which had asked human rights experts to produce the very same report that now has been stonewalled.

The move to block the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention’s presentation is particularly galling, given that it is happening on International Human Rights Day 2021, held under the themes of equality and non-discrimination. From stop and search practices to mass incarceration or the death penalty, evidence shows that repressive drug policies disproportionately target oppressed and marginalised people across the world, including racialised groups, Indigenous people, people living in poverty, women, and LGBTQI+ people.

‘The decision to silence a UN human rights expert precisely on International Human Rights Day is alarming and sets a dangerous precedent’, said Ann Fordham, Executive Director at the International Drug Policy Consortium. ‘It signals a deep-seated unwillingness to address the egregious human rights violations committed in the name of drug control’.

Naomi Burke-Shyne, Executive Director at Harm Reduction International, said: ‘Member States must take urgent action to ensure that Dr. Steinerte is invited back. If the Commission on Narcotic Drugs is unable to acknowledge and address the human rights abuses caused by the war on drugs, the Commission will slide into isolation’.

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NOTES TO EDITORS

  • Arbitrary detention relating to drug policies - Study of the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention (WGAD) - The report whose presentation by the WGAD at the Commission on Narcotic Drugs Reconvened 64th Session has been blocked by the Commission. This study was requested from the WGAD by Human Rights Council resolution 42/22. The report concludes with a wide range of recommendations, including the decriminalisation of the ‘use, possession, acquisition or cultivation of drugs for personal use’ and the exclusion of military authorities from drug enforcement activities.
  • 2021 Human Rights Day - Official UN Human Rights portal with information about this year’s commemoration of this day of international observance.
  • Agenda towards transformative change for racial justice and equality - UN High Commissioner for Human Rights - A recent report by the OHCHR shedding light on the disproportionate impacts of the ‘war on drugs’ on people of African descent.

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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:

Adria Cots Fernandez

International Drug Policy Consortium
Mob: +44 7835157062
E-mail: acotsfernandez@idpc.net
Twitter: @AdriCots

Ann Fordham

International Drug Policy Consortium

Mob: +44 7970 034810
E-mail: afordham@idpc.net
Twitter: @AnnFordham

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