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INSULZA REITERATES COMMITMENT TO COOPERATION AGAINST DRUGS

  May 11, 2006

The Secretary General of the Organization of American States (OAS), José Miguel Insulza, reiterated today the urgent need for a renewed, strengthened commitment to international cooperation as a fundamental strategy in the hemispheric fight against drugs and crime.

Speaking at the thirty-ninth regular period of sessions of the Inter-American Drug Abuse Control Commission (known by its Spanish acronym, CICAD), Insulza stressed that cooperation among all nations is vital to confront the dangers of illicit drugs in the hemisphere. “It is necessary to encourage the participation of all government entities and organizations, and to promote cooperation among the countries of the Americas,” he said. The drug trade is a regional and global enterprise supported by multiple sources, he added, and it is imperative to join resources and tackle it with a multifaceted, regional strategy as a single response.

The Secretary General invited the countries to adopt laws that would, on a regular and permanent basis, contribute funds towards CICAD equal to less than one percent of the drug-related assets they seized. “If this type of contribution is not contemplated in the legal systems of your countries, I urge you to work on the legislative modifications that may be necessary,” he said. Insulza added that CICAD’s Executive Secretariat “has assured me that their experts are able to help in the revision and creation of such legal dispositions.” He noted that this is not a new initiative, given that the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime contemplates this type of measure.

During the three-day CICAD meeting, chaired by the Deputy Minister of Foreign Relations of Bolivia, Ambassador Mauricio Dorfler Ocampo, the countries approved the national and hemispheric reports on the implementation of the Third Round of Evaluation 2003-2004 of the Multilateral Evaluation Mechanism (MEM). This instrument uses a number of indicators to evaluate the progress made in the fight against drugs in the 34 CICAD member countries and in the entire hemisphere. The meeting also approved recommendations from the Intergovernmental Working Group to modify the MEM. The number of indicators was reduced in order to expedite the process.

Insulza told the experts from the 34 member states that the success of the MEM depends on broad political support. “Without support from all the countries, this mechanism would lose importance,” he said. “We think that CICAD and the MEM have gained greater recognition during this Third Evaluation Round.”

A report comparing drug use among adolescents who attend school in some South American countries was also presented during the meeting. This was a collaborative effort between the CICAD Secretariat, headed by James Mack, and the United Nations Office Against Drugs and Crime “This report provides us with an updated, valid and reliable diagnosis on the use of drugs and the associated risk factors and protections,” Insulza said. The reports approved during the CICAD session will be presented at the OAS General Assembly in the Dominican Republic in June.

Reference: E-114/06