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Thursday, 24 November 2011

Former president of Brazil calls on NGOs to back the Count the Costs initiative at UK event

This blog originally appeared on the Count the Costs website.


Last Friday 18 November, Transform Drug Policy Foundation, in partnership witha group of major UK drug policy organisations, held a private dinner and discussion for a select group of 30 key NGOs from the development, security, human rights and environment sectors at the Commonwealth Club in London. The high-level event featured presentations by the former president of Brazil and chair of the Global Commission on Drug Policy Henrique Fernando Cardoso (available to view below), the former president of Switzerland Ruth Dreifuss (also of the Global Commission) and Eduardo Medina Mora, Mexican Ambassador to the UK and Mexico's former attorney general.




The event, Time to Count the Costs of the War on Drugs,formed part of our wider Count theCosts initiative and focused on highlighting the devastating impactof the war on drugs on international development and security, human rights,and the environment. Briefings outlining the costs to these first two sectorscan be downloaded from the Count the Costs website (developmentand security herehumanrights here), and the environment briefing will be available in the nextfew days. 

We were delighted by the high-level representatives whoattended our event and the overwhelmingly positive and supportive tone of theevening. While many of the attendees wish at present to remain anonymous, wecan confirm that senior representatives from organisations such as Health Poverty ActionAvaazChristian Aidthe Institute for Development Studies and Penal Reform International all came to hear about the costs of the war on drugs to their respective fields.

In addition, following his attendance at the event, JonathanGlennie of the Overseas Development Institute wrote an excellentpiece in The Guardian mentioning Count the Costs and calling on the development community to engagewith the drugs debate.

As a result of this event, and the Count the Costs initiative more generally, we're increasingly confident that mainstream, non-drug policy NGOs will become more and more involved in the drugs issue and help advocate for reform. Indeed, Count the Costs is demonstrating to a range of organisations the extent to which their work is being undermined by current drug policy  and why they need to take a stand on it.

To see the current list of organisations that endorse the Count the Costs initiative, see the supporters page. And, if you haven’t already, please sign up to the Count theCosts statement.



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