UN backs prohibitionist drug policies despite call for more 'humane solution'
Plan adopted at special session focuses on reform and cooperation between nations but maintains policies that criminalise non-medical or scientific drug use
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
 The 2016 UN General Assembly Special Session (UNGASS) has approved an agreement that leaves in place the prohibitionist  policies banning narcotics use, despite growing international discontent  with the "war on drugs" – and the concerns of the nations that called  the meeting. "So far, the solutions [to control drugs and crime] implemented by the  international community have been frankly insufficient," Mexican  president Enrique Peña Nieto told the meeting. Within the General Assembly, the rift between countries interested  in drug policy reform and those with repressive drug control regimes was  evident.
The 2016 UN General Assembly Special Session (UNGASS) has approved an agreement that leaves in place the prohibitionist  policies banning narcotics use, despite growing international discontent  with the "war on drugs" – and the concerns of the nations that called  the meeting. "So far, the solutions [to control drugs and crime] implemented by the  international community have been frankly insufficient," Mexican  president Enrique Peña Nieto told the meeting. Within the General Assembly, the rift between countries interested  in drug policy reform and those with repressive drug control regimes was  evident.


 
						


