The main causal factor for homelessness and drug use is the same: Policies that constrain people's ability to meet their daily needs, secure steady employment, afford rent and be part of a stable community.
Regulation is likely to lead to better outcomes for health, education and justice, but the bill needs to offer further clarity on issues such as potency and the role of for-benefit companies, according to legal expert.
As farmers are left with acres of coca leaf but no means to sell it and cartels are adapting their trafficking patterns, the economic consequences of the pandemic are becoming increasingly visible.
The Ganja Growers and Producers Association says the industry was not designed with a ground-up approach and that regulations are unworkable, restrictive and draconian.
WADPN has provided people who use drugs with credible information, protective equipment, food items and hygienic paraphernalia, whilst urging enforcement officers to reduce raids and incarcerations.
As the COVID-19 pandemic, and government responses to it, are exacerbating existing inequalities that pose particular risks and challenges for people who use drugs, States must use this opportunity to put in place effective policies to protect their rights.
A report by the OHCHR confirmed findings and concerns of widespread and systematic killings and arbitrary detention in the context of the war on drugs, killings and abuses targeting farmers and indigenous peoples, the silencing of independent media, critics and the opposition.