Should
drug addicts be jailed or rehabilitated?
Kartono Mohamad ; Chairman of
the Indonesian Public Health Scholars Association (IAKMI)
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JAKARTA
POST, 20 Maret 2014
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The
debate on whether drug users should be treated as criminals or victims has
recently reemerged, especially after a TV celebrity was found unconscious in
his car due to drug intoxication.
Is he a
drug abuser or is he a drug trafficker? Should he go to jail, to a drug
rehabilitation facility, or both?
The idea
of treating drug users as criminals came from the fact they use or are in
possession of drugs, which by law are declared illegal. According to legal
logic, anybody who uses or is in possession of illegal things, be they drugs,
guns or counterfeit money, is deemed a law offender.
On the
other hand, drug addiction is also considered a form of social disease, like
prostitution. Not so long ago HIV was also regarded a social disease. That is
why Law No. 35/2009 on narcotics and addictive drugs provides treatment and
rehabilitation for drug addicts, but not for drug traffickers or dealers.
In that
case, we are inclined to differentiate between those who intentionally hook
other people to become addicts and those who are the victim of the former
group. Here starts the idea of treating drug addicts as victims. As victims
they deserve empathy, treatment and assistance to get rid of their addiction
through rehabilitation.
Indeed,
Law No. 35/2009 treats drug traffickers, drug addicts and drug abusers
differently. However, the difference
between drug addicts and drug abusers is not clear. It seems the definition
of drug abuser, “penyalah guna”, refers to someone who uses drugs unlawfully
without being addicted. Otherwise they will be classified as a drug addict.
This is
very confusing. If individuals are not addicted, why are they using unlawful
drugs? As for the punishment, every drug addict or drug abuser can be
imprisoned and can attend rehabilitation. Only underage drug addicts/users
will be exempted from jail and just sent to a rehabilitation facility.
Even
though the law provides the possibility for the rehabilitation of drug
addicts, the chapters on punishment do not explain who is going to be sent to
rehabilitation and who is going to be punished with imprisonment. Everybody,
whether the individual is a drug user or drug addict, is given prison time.
So drug addicts can be punished by imprisonment as well as being sent to the
rehabilitation facility.
It is
unclear whether this rehabilitation period is also considered part of jail
punishment or is a separate form of punishment. In other words, drug addicts
are also considered criminals, not just victims.
Many
people or governments do not support prison terms for drug addicts. The UN
Commission on Narcotic Drugs, for instance, adopted a resolution that
recommends the treatment, rehabilitation and social reintegration of drug
addicts as an alternative to imprisonment. It also recommends efforts to prevent
death from overdoses.
Yury
Fedotov, executive director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC),
emphasized the prioritization of the health agenda, stating: “At present, the
balance between our work on the supply and demand sides stays firmly in favor
of the supply side. We must restore the balance. Prevention, treatment,
rehabilitation, reintegration and health have to be recognized as key
elements in our strategy.” This recent emphasis on health is welcomed,
because discussions on drug policy are too often dominated by criminal
justice arguments and polarized opinions on how to solve the so called “war
on drugs”, like what is currently happening in Indonesia.
However,
we must also keep in mind that rehabilitation consisting of medical and
social rehabilitation as stipulated by Law No. 35/2009 will be free from
adverse treatment. There is no implementing regulation on how rehabilitation
facilities should be managed and controlled.
Human rights abuses can happen without public knowledge, as in the case
of Vietnam as reported by the US-based Human Rights Watch. Drug addicts who
are detained in rehabilitation centers in the country are often forced to
work with little or no pay and those refusing to work are beaten with
electric batons. ●
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