Quantcast
Channel: Juarez: War, Stability and the Future - InSight Crime | Organized Crime in the Americas - InSight Crime | Organized Crime in the Americas
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 593

Uruguay's Ex-President Vasquez In Favor of Regulating Cocaine Market

$
0
0
Uruguay's Ex-President Vasquez In Favor of Regulating Cocaine Market

In a surprise that comes just days after an historic vote by Uruguay's lower house to legalize marijuana, the country's ex-president Tabare Vasquez said Uruguay should now consider ways "to regulate" the cocaine market.

Vasquez, who is positioning himself to run for president again next year and has a 62 percent approval rating said in a television interview that the key question is education, not consumption. (See interview below)

"I think (legalizing cocaine) is not necessarily making it easier to consume it," he said. "We have to educate (the population) so they don't consume it. But more than making it easier, we need to regulate the consumption of drugs."

He later linked the proposal to his administration's successful anti-smoking campaign in the mid-2000s.

In early August, Uruguay's lower house passed a measure to legalize the production, sale, and consumption of marijuana. The bill goes to the senate where it is expected to pass easily, then get signed into law, making the country the first in the world to completely legalize the drug.

InSight Crime Analysis

Vasquez's pronouncement is surprising on various levels. Vasquez had previously been coy about his position concerning the legalization of marijuana, and few expected him to come out so clearly in favor of the measure, much less talk openly about cocaine in the process.

The marijuana bill did not have popular support (63 percent were against it in the polls leading up to the house vote), so Vasquez's position on cocaine and marijuana may hurt him in the campaign.

SEE ALSO: Uruguay: Marijuana, Organized Crime and the Politics of Drugs

To be sure, legalizing marijuana has been a monumental task for the proponents of the measure. It took a sophisticated campaign that included YouTube videos (see below) to familiarize Uruguayans with the issue and win over Vasquez's own party, which barely managed to push it through the lower house.

Finally, cocaine is not marijuana and there is little consensus, even in the pro-marijuana camps, about how "to regulate" its consumption. What's more, there is no existing legislation in Uruguay regarding its consumption, as there was with marijuana.

Still, Vasquez is one of many leaders in the region who is trying to turn the drug debate from a security question into a health question. He knows health issues. He is himself a doctor and is quick to point out that his efforts are about regulating and legalizing the consumption of the now illicit drugs.

"We need to educate (youth) to prevent (consumption)," he said.

  • Uruguay
  • Drug Policy
    v

    Viewing all articles
    Browse latest Browse all 593

    Trending Articles