POS Foundation
Ghana : Des étudiants de droit sont invités à se prémunir contre les méfaits des politiques antidrogues
L'événement a reconnu les effets néfastes des politiques antidrogue sur les jeunes et les personnes marginalisées, et a insisté sur la nécessité de donner la priorité au soutien plutôt qu'à la punition. Pour en savoir plus, en anglais, veuillez lire les informations ci-dessous.
Accra, Jan. 30, GNA – Ghanaian Law students have been urged to help prevent drug policies, measures and legislations that work against the rehabilitation of substance abusers.
The students were asked to not only play roles in the prevention of the use and circulation of drugs (cocaine, marijuana, tramadol, etc.) but also be critical of incarceration of abusers and lack of rehabilitation centres.
The call was made by drug policies and legislations advocates at a day’s hybrid workshop for tertiary students and faculty members in Ghana by POS Foundation on the theme: “Substance Use and Prevention: A Comparative Dialogue between Ghana and the USA’s Drug Policy.”
Participating universities were GIMPA Law School, Ghana, Adler University, Chicago, Illinois and Columbia University, New York and Fordham University, New York and Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP) with the students sharing their perspectives.
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Madam Maria-Goretti Ane Loglo, Lawyer and IDPC Consultant for Africa, said the people languishing in jail because of drug use had been the younger population, a situation we had to avert because there had been lack of jobs to engage them.
“As a country we also need to revisit the fines given to offenders. The fines are very high and many of the people cannot afford. The State must resource the Fund to help in rehabilitation and put up rehabilitation centres that are accessible and less expensive,” she said
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Profils associés
- POS Foundation
- Maria-Goretti Ane
- International Drug Policy Consortium (IDPC)
- Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP) International