36th Edition:
West Africa
Drug Policy Network, & Analysis of Bill to transform Ghana’s Narcotics
Board (NACOB) into a Commission
It will be recalled that
Ep.31 of the Show looked at the necessity of civil society intervention in
drug policy in West Africa.
Subsequently, the Ghana Chapter of the newly-established Network (WaDruPoNe),
which is backed by the Kofi Annan Foundation’s West Africa Commission on Drugs,
held a meeting 25 February to chart the way forward on the Network’s advocacy.
In this second programme
on civil society advocacy around drug policy in West Africa, we want to use the
36th edition of “Africa in Focus” to begin a very critical and
important conversation on two things.
First: the implications
of a transformation of the erstwhile Narcotics Control Board into a Narcotics
Control Commission, and what that augurs for treatment of those hooked onto
drugs. Advocates from the newly-established WaDruPoNe believe the Bill to
sustain the old and repressive focus of “war on drugs”, which targets the small
fish by imposing long and harsh sentences on them, in lieu of treating them as
addicts in need of assistance by clinicians, psychologists, and public health
professionals.
Second: the Network’s
call on members of the public and CSOs to support the call to SUPPORT NOT
PUNISH drug users, with an equally-urgent call for a holistic review of the Bill
before ratification by Parliament.
To this end, we will be speaking to two technical experts
from the Ghana Chapter of the Network on the show to help speak to these
issues, as well as a reformed drug user who can help speak to the necessity of drug policy reform.
Join us if
you can at 1pm on 17 March, 2015.
Guiding questions
- Why is an analysis of the new Narcotics Control Commission Bill
(transform Narcotics Board into a Commission) important?
- Does the bill address harm reduction
strategies?
- Is
the NCC Bill what one may call a progressive one?
- Despite the 2014 “Not Just in Transit” report by the West Africa
Commission on Drugs, why have governments been slow in treating drug use
as a public health issue?
- How universal will the current
bill address the needs of every Ghanaian drug user regardless of their
socio-economic status?
Guests in the studio:
Ø
Maria-Goretti Ane, Barrister/Solicitor
& Regional Consultant, International Drug Policy Consortium
Ø
Mohammed A Adamu , Founder/CEO WABHARM Foundation(GH)
Ø
Christian “Lion”
Lokko, Public Relations Officer, REMAR
On the line:
·
Macmillan Prentice,
Standards Officer, Ghana
Standards Authority @13h15
·
Kobby Blay, EbolaWatch
@13h30
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