Experts Sign Open Letter To Legalise Drugs In New Zealand
Today, a new organisation, Harm Reduction Coalition Aotearoa (HRCA) launched with the submission of an Open Letter to Prime Minister Christopher Luxon, signed by a plethora of professors, academics, researchers, clinicians, health professionals, NGO workers, drug consumers, and members of the public calling for the legalisation and regulation of all drugs.
Harm Reduction Coalition Aotearoa, a new incorporated society dedicated to ending harmful drug policies, officially launched today, on International Harm Reduction Day. HRCA seeks a new fit-for-purpose drug law for Aotearoa New Zealand, rooted in science, experience and evidence, to promote harm reduction and protect human rights as originally recommended by the NZ Law Commission in 2011.
Founded by a diverse, non-partisan, independent group with a wealth of expertise in drug policy and practice, HRCA boasts a membership of over 50 individuals and six organisations, including; the Drugs Health and Development Project (DHDP), the Drug Injecting Services Canterbury (DISC), Aotearoa Drug Information Outreach (ADIO), Know Your Stuff (KYSNZ), Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP) and HIT UK.
Wendy Allison MNZM, a founding member of HRCA who was also instrumental in bringing drug checking to New Zealand says:
"It is clear that the Misuse of Drugs Act is not fit for purpose. After 50 years it has failed to reduce drug use or drug harm. In fact, every problem we have around drugs in Aotearoa has developed under prohibition. We as a country deserve better - it's time for a new approach."
The launch of Harm Reduction Coalition Aotearoa comes at a critical time, as governments across the world are having to rethink prohibitionist drug laws that do more harm than the drugs they purport to protect us from. A range of alternative models of legalisation, decriminalisation and regulation are emerging worldwide. Lachlan Akers, Harm Reduction Coalition Aotearoa Chairperson says:
“It’s time to stop funding criminal organisations by letting them control New Zealand’s drug market. We need to end prohibition to prioritise the health and wellbeing of people who use drugs, to benefit our society as a whole.”
In the Open Letter, HRCA calls for the failed and damaging prohibitionist drug laws to be rescinded and replaced by a new Psychoactive Drugs Act that would legally regulate the supply of all psychoactive drugs. The Open Letter to the government is supported by 155 signatures and includes eight professors, 31 doctors (PhD & MDs), is endorsed by 29 organisations and supported by experts from 14 countries across North America, South America, South Africa, Europe and Australasia.
For more information on Harm Reduction Coalition Aotearoa and how to get involved, please visit https://www.hrca.nz/. Together, we can make a difference by developing world leading drug policies in New Zealand that are rational, responsible and put the health and well being of people first.
The Open Letter to the New Zealand Government submitted on Tuesday 7th May 2024 6am
The ideologically driven War on Drugs has failed to reduce the demand for, or the supply of, prohibited psychoactive substances in Aotearoa New Zealand; in reality it has had the opposite effect. It is time we face the truth and bring an end to the serious harm caused by prohibition.
In 1971, the United States of America declared a global War on Drugs, to which New Zealand aligned, in an attempt to eradicate drug use. Despite five decades of prohibition under the Misuse of Drugs Act 1975, illicit drugs remain prevalent and accessible. Not only has the War on Drugs failed to achieve its purported goals, it has exacerbated the very issues it set out to address and spawned new, serious harms; communities are victims of violence from drug crime, families are torn apart by incarceration, and countless lives are lost to overdose and addiction. People who use drugs are forced into dangerous underground markets where gangs and criminals profit. While drugs are used by all sections of society, law enforcement has targeted the poor, young people, Māori and people with chronic unmet needs, leading to disproportionate arrests, imprisonment and social exclusion. Yet drug use has occurred throughout history, and always will, so rather than bury our heads in the sand, we need new laws that responsibly manage the drug market.
Harm Reduction Coalition Aotearoa seeks a new approach, one that ensures drug policies are no longer rooted in ideology, but in science, evidence and experience. We seek the implementation of policies that promote harm reduction and protect human rights for all.
As a first step, New Zealand must rescind the Psychoactive Substances Act 2013 and the Misuse of Drugs Act 1975 (as recommended by the Law Commission Review in 2011) and develop a new, fit-for-purpose Psychoactive Drugs Act managed by Manatū Hauora Ministry of Health, to regulate the legal supply of all psychoactive substances.
With legalisation and regulation, we will seriously weaken the underground market, ensure product quality and safety, enable consumer rights, and generate tax revenue for essential public services.
Legalisation and regulation will stop life opportunities being ruined by drug convictions, and reduce the fear, discrimination and stigma for those seeking help with drugs.
Legalisation and regulation will ensure the minority of people who get caught up in problematic drug use have access to a full range of harm reduction options and evidence-based support services.
The legalisation of drugs for personal use, supply regulation, and evidence-based harm reduction strategies will significantly reduce the evident drug harms in New Zealand.
Realising the serious truth about the War on Drugs is a necessary act; we must stop perpetuating the status quo while sacrificing lives and livelihoods in pursuit of this highly questionable yet pervasive prohibitionist ideology. Developing a mature and responsible approach to drugs requires bold leadership and collective action - that’s why a non-partisan and diverse group of experts in the field and people with lived experience have collaborated to form Harm Reduction Coalition Aotearoa.
It's time to chart a new pathway forward - one guided by compassion, science, evidence, experience and human rights. Aotearoa New Zealand has the opportunity to be a world leader with transformative, fit for purpose, evidence-based drug laws. Together we can build a more just, humane and coherent approach to legal and illegal drug use in Aotearoa New Zealand.
hrca.nz 7th May 2024
Signatures
Country | Organisations Supporting the HRCA Open Letter |
New Zealand | Aotearoa Drug Information Outreach Trust |
New Zealand | Auckland Patients Group |
New Zealand | Drug Injecting Services in Canterbury |
New Zealand | Drugs, Health and Development Project Trust |
New Zealand | Institute of Criminology, Te Herenga Waka - Victoria University of Wellington |
New Zealand | KnowYourStuffNZ |
New Zealand | People Against Prisons Aotearoa |
New Zealand | Student Christian Movement Aotearoa |
New Zealand | Students for Sensible Drug Policy Aotearoa |
New Zealand | Students for Sensible Drug Policy Ōtepoti/Dunedin |
Australia | 360Edge |
Australia | Global Law Enforcement and Public Health Association |
Australia | The Loop Australia |
Australia | Unharm |
Canada | J Healthcare Initiative |
Canada | Moms Stop The Harm |
Colombia | Corporación Acción Técnica Social |
Europe | Law Enforcement Action Partnership (EU) |
Ireland | Priority Medical Clinic, Dublin, Ireland |
Mexico | Instituto RIA |
Netherlands | Correlation-European Harm Reduction Network |
Norway | Association for Humane Drug Policy |
Slovenia | društvo AREAL |
South Africa | South African Network of People Who Use Drugs (SANPUD) |
United Kingdom | Global Drug Survey |
United Kingdom | Transform Drug Policy Foundation |
USA | Dee-Dee Stout Consulting |
USA | Doctors for Drug Policy Reform |
USA | Law Enforcement Action Partnership (USA) |
Country | Professors Supporting HRCA Open Letter |
---|---|
New Zealand | Professor Joseph M Boden |
New Zealand | Professor Elizabeth Stanley, Institute of Criminology, Te Herenga Waka - Victoria University of Wellington |
United Kingdom (NZ citizen) | Professor Magdalena Harris |
United Kingdom | Professor Shadd Maruna |
United Kingdom | Professor Adam R Winstock, Consultant Psychiatrist |
Australia | Professor Nicole Lee, 360Edge |
Australia | Professor Jason Ferris |
USA | Professor Carl Hart |
Country | Doctors (PhD/MD) Supporting the HRCA Open Letter |
---|---|
New Zealand | Dr Alice Mills |
New Zealand | Dr Brin Ryder |
New Zealand | Dr Carol Harrington |
New Zealand | Dr Daniel Greenblatt |
New Zealand | Dr Fiona Hutton, Associate Professor in Criminology |
New Zealand | Dr Geoff Noller, Substance Use and Policy Analysis |
New Zealand | Dr Helen Fitt |
New Zealand | Dr Isa Pearl Ritchie |
New Zealand | Dr Jez Weston |
New Zealand | Dr Joel Pitt, PhD |
New Zealand | Dr John Marks MB ChB (Edin), FRCPsych, FRANZCP |
New Zealand | Dr Julian Buchanan, DipSW, MA, PhD, Former UNODC Advisor |
New Zealand | Dr Laura Joyce, Emergency Medicine Specialist |
New Zealand | Dr Lynzi Armstrong |
New Zealand | Dr Michael Roguski |
New Zealand | Dr Peyton Bond |
New Zealand | Dr Rhys Ponton, PhD, BPharm, RegPharmNZ |
New Zealand | Dr Rose Crossin |
New Zealand | Dr Sally Day |
New Zealand | Dr Samantha Keene, Senior Lecturer in Criminology |
New Zealand | Dr Sophie Beaumont |
Australia | Dr Cheneal Puljevic, The Loop Australia |
Australia | Dr Kathryn Daley - Senior Lecturer in Youth Work and Youth Studies, RMIT University. |
Australia | Dr Melissa Jardine, Global Law Enforcement and Public Health Association |
Australia | Dr Monica Barratt |
Australia | Dr Peta Malins, Senior Lecturer, Criminology & Justice Studies |
Australia | Dr Will Tregoning, CEO, Unharm |
Germany | Dr Fabian Pitter Steinmetz |
Ireland | Dr Garrett McGovern, Medical Director & GP Specialising in Addiction Medicine, Priority Medical Clinic, Dublin, Ireland |
Ireland | Dr Órfhlaith Campbell |
UK | Dr Jenny Scott |
COUNTRY | FULL LIST OF 155 SIGNATORIES |
New Zealand | Alex H., HRCA Founder |
New Zealand | Lachlan Akers, HRCA Chairperson |