The Philippine government says China has executed two Filipinos for drug trafficking despite its appeals to commute their death sentences to life in prison.
Some experts say the resounding success of Portugal’s approach has been exaggerated. In a 2014 paper, UC Berkeley’s Hannah Laqueur found that even before Portugal passed its decriminalization law, it was already loosely enforcing its anti-drug laws. “For years before the 2001 legislation, fines served as the primary sanction for individuals arrested and convicted of drug use,” she wrote. “By removing the possibility of criminal sanctions for drug use, the 2001 law primarily codified the existing practice.”
While there is still a debate about the policy and how easily it could apply to other countries, it is clear that on the ground in Portugal, healthcare workers feel better equipped to help addicts. Fonseca was surprised and moved by their dedication to people “largely forgotten by the rest of society.” That’s in spite of austerity measures introduced two years after Portugal’s 2010 financial crisis, when the government merged the 1,700 staff of its autonomous drug agency with its national health service. Although Fonseca says centers still lack adequate funding, two state-sponsored outreach teams—made up of psychologists, social workers and nurses—continue to travel each day to find addicts and get them the treatment they need. “The teams would go to the most dangerous parts of Lisbon and create real relationships,” he says.
Countries That Have Decriminalized Drugs [Aug 20 2020 | Victoria Simpson | WorldAtlas]
Over 25 countries around the world have decriminalized drugs to some degree, including Portugal, the Netherlands, the Czech Republic, and Germany.
In the US, marijuana use is decriminalized in some states, but it is still illegal at the federal level, making it difficult for marijuana-related businesses to set up shop.
Countries that have decriminalized drugs have seen disease rates drop as well as deaths from overdose.
edit: added missed article title
I wonder if they would try to legalize and regulate, I don’t hear positive news of places doing this though.
Article from 2021, “Death penalty: How many countries still have it?”
Death penalty: How many countries still have it? [Dec 11 2021 | BBC | Reality Check team]
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-45835584
10 facts about the death penalty in the U.S. [Jul 19 2021 | John Gramlich | Pew Research Center]
https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2021/07/19/10-facts-about-the-death-penalty-in-the-u-s/
Want to Win the War on Drugs? Portugal Might Have the Answer [Aug 01 2018 | Naina Bajekal | Time]
https://time.com/longform/portugal-drug-use-decriminalization/
Countries That Have Decriminalized Drugs [Aug 20 2020 | Victoria Simpson | WorldAtlas]
https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/countries-that-have-decriminalized-drugs.html