新加坡毒品威胁日益猖獗,如何应对?

2024年12月07日   •   342次阅读

Consider San Francisco. In 2014, it passed laws to reduce the offence of drug possession from a serious offence to a misdemeanour which is to be dealt with administratively. And you know what police would do then? They de-prioritised, decided that they will not deal strictly with open-drug use and small-scale possession. A decade later, anyone visiting the city now will see people living in slum-like conditions along major streets, looking for their next fix. Last year, San Francisco's death rate from drug overdoses reached a record high. It was more than double the US national average.

Some places, which chose to legalise drugs, have realised that the results were not as promised and have reversed their policies.

In 2020, the US State of Oregon decriminalised use and possession of small amounts of most drugs, including cocaine, meth and heroin. Fifty-eight percent of voters in Oregon supported it. They thought this was the solution. Police can then focus on other work and abusers would feel less stigmatised and abusers will seek treatment.

But people in Oregon soon saw the results of this policy. From 2019 to 2022, the number of drug overdose deaths more than doubled from about 600 to about 1,300. People felt unsafe on the streets, businesses started leaving and the situation got very bad. By August 2023, last year, a majority of people in Oregon wanted to repeal the measure and in 2024 this year, they reversed course. They re-criminalised possession of drugs for even small amounts.

Let me give another example. Last year, the Canadian province of British Columbia decriminalised drugs to try and reduce its overdose rates. Instead, the number of drug overdose deaths increased by more than 5% from the year before. There was also public backlash against the open drug use.

Earlier this year, the provincial government tried to restrict the public places where people could consume drugs. But the Supreme Court blocked the measure, saying it could, and I quote, "cause irreparable harm" to drug users. The Court said that users were at risk of overdosing alone, since they would have fewer public places to consume drugs and where people would be present.

Brad West, a mayor from a British Columbian city, said that the courts were out of touch with the public and blocking the measure, and I quote, "ignored the harm that occurs to others by allowing rampant public use".

Last month, the BBC reported that the authorities in British Columbia were working urgently to re-criminalise the use of hard drugs in public places. My view to Members – when they experiment with laws like this, they are actually experimenting with the lives of people, including the lives of innocent young children.

The policies and u-turns have a long-term impact on the next generation and the impact cannot be easily reversed. Parents and guardians, if they become drug addicts, homeless and unemployed – it is the children who would suffer this proportionately.

Let us look at a sobering personal account of a child who grew up in America with a mother who was a cocaine abuser: "From the ages of seven to 12, we were pretty much on our own. Sometimes, we would be left alone for days at a time. We would not have lights, water or heat. At night, we would huddle around the stove for warmth. It got so bad that we started hiding our mother's keys just to keep her from going to the crack house."

In 2021, Gallup reported that about 32% of Americans say that drug use has been a cause of trouble in their family, one-third of all Americans. That is almost double the proportion since 1999, when it was 17%.

Children and the next generation are the real victims. A study estimated that in 2017, about 2.2 million children and adolescents in the US had a parent with an opioid use disorder or were affected by opioids themselves. The study projected that by 2030, this number would go up to 4.3 million – nearly double.

These children often do not have a proper home to grow up in, no role models to look up to and no stability to anchor their development. Without basic support, they have poorer educational outcomes, increased likelihood of developing substance use disorders and early emergence of chronic diseases.

The cycle will keep repeating itself. Really, one has got to ask: who speaks for the human rights of these millions of children?

Closer to home, in Southeast Asia, the Golden Triangle, where the borders of Myanmar, Thailand and Laos meet, is a major drug producing region. The UNODC reported in 2022 that East and Southeast Asia are "literally swimming" in meth. In 2022 alone, 151 tonnes of meth were seized in the region.

At the Committee of Supply, I spoke about the situation in Thailand. When cannabis was legalised, it was available immediately almost anywhere you looked – restaurants, convenience stores and even near schools.

Within six months of legalisation, the number of addicts went up four times. There were young teens and children who consumed cannabis-infused cookies, candies and sweets – they thought these were ordinary snacks – but ended up having to be hospitalised. The Thai government recently has announced plans to reimpose a ban on recreational cannabis use by the end of this year. One can see why but it is no longer going to be easy to do because if part of it is legal and part of it is not legal, then, enforcement is never going to be easy.

In any event, businesses which have invested in the industry will likely push back strongly and those who are now addicted to the drug both will find it very difficult to kick off the habit and will need to be supported by the healthcare system. The consequences, in many cases, can be irreversible. The impact will be very long-lasting.

If you look at Malaysia, cannabis seizures jumped from 3,700 kilogrammes in 2021 to 6,200 kilogrammes in 2022, just one worrying statistic – and there are many others.

Alex丨编辑

Alex丨编审

新加坡国会丨来源

上一页
3/3

555

新加坡16岁“嫖娼”不违法?!揭秘本地色情行业真实收入
2025年05月01日   •   7万次阅读
新加坡12家银行定存利率汇总!存这里最划算!中国用户能开这些银行账户
2025年05月03日   •   6万次阅读
16岁少女醉酒遭多人性侵,新加坡罕见恶性案件终判刑!
2025年05月05日   •   6万次阅读
牛车水食肆纷争升级!女店长与店员当街互殴,双双送医一人被调查
2025年04月29日   •   6万次阅读
【GE2025】 “我们拿鸡翅,但送你整只鸡!” 行动党候选人言论引关注
2025年05月01日   •   5万次阅读
新加坡38岁女子在惹兰勿刹一带,遭两名陌生男子袭击绑起后抢劫
2025年04月29日   •   3万次阅读
卷土重来! “蹭饭女团”讨钱 专挑阿叔下手
2025年05月01日   •   3万次阅读
事关所有人!新加坡总理黄循财多项预警!一大波补贴马上发给所有人~
2025年05月05日   •   3万次阅读
好凶!女司机抢泊车位 抢赢了还嚣张这么做
2025年05月02日   •   3万次阅读
三周后的生命重逢!里峇峇利路火灾获救孩童家长泪谢救命客工
2025年04月30日   •   3万次阅读
因澡堂偷拍丑闻!新加坡前外交官抗疫奖章被正式褫夺
2025年04月30日   •   3万次阅读
反对党:婚外情!洗钱!贪污!买不起房!新加坡要沦为乞丐国度!
2025年05月02日   •   2万次阅读
月台喝水险挨罚 留学生:一口差点喝掉500新币!
2025年04月30日   •   2万次阅读
邻居难忍异味报警 七旬轮椅叔被发现暴毙家中成腐尸
2025年05月02日   •   2万次阅读
14 岁少年犯罪 “狂飙”!持枪抢劫、下药盗窃、无证逆行,终入青年改造所
2025年04月30日   •   2万次阅读
老字号包子有蟑螂 食客投诉恶心
2025年05月02日   •   2万次阅读
新加坡大选,执政党狂胜,有些人连裤衩都输掉了......
2025年05月05日   •   2万次阅读
【GE2025】李显龙:外国人煽动种族宗教情绪 触犯新加坡两大禁忌
2025年04月29日   •   2万次阅读
【GE2025】滕沛源因美貌受不当关注 工人党吁尊重女性
2025年05月02日   •   2万次阅读
中央快速公路惊现惨烈车祸!德士电单车相撞,71 岁骑士当场身亡,司机被捕
2025年04月30日   •   2万次阅读
【GE2025】人民行动党党员派竞选传单 遭中年男子吐口水
2025年05月02日   •   2万次阅读
疑似不满被鸣笛 我国男子在新山挥拳打马国男子
2025年05月03日   •   1万次阅读
人民力量党唱红的“左看右看”神曲 意外成了政治新梗被玩嗨
2025年04月30日   •   1万次阅读
冒充假朋友骗走本地人数十万元 五名马国男子被判监罚款
2025年04月29日   •   1万次阅读