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Arriving in his small office in Lisbon, the year-old tosses his jacket aside, leaving his shirt collar crooked. He looks a little tired from the many trips he's taken lately -- the world wants to know exactly how the experiment in Portugal is going. He adds his latest piece of mail to the mountain of papers on his desk. One gram of heroin, two grams of cocaine, 25 grams of marijuana leaves or five grams of hashish: These are the drug quantities one can legally purchase and possess in Portugal, carrying them through the streets of Lisbon in a pants pocket, say, without fear of repercussion. MDMA -- the active ingredient in ecstasy -- and amphetamines -- including speed and meth -- can also be possessed in amounts up to one gram. That's roughly enough of each of these drugs to last 10 days. Portugal paved a new path when it decided to decriminalize drugs of all kinds. As part of its war on drugs, Portugal has stopped prosecuting users. Now the head of Portugal's national anti-drug program and an important figure in Portuguese health policy, he still talks like an easygoing family doctor. The question at stake: How can a government keep its citizens from taking dangerous drugs? One way is to crack down on those who provide the drugs -- the cartels, the middle men and the street dealers. Another approach is to focus on the customers -- arresting them, trying them and imprisoning them. Legal prosecution -- as both a control mechanism and a deterrent -- is the chosen approach for most governments. Pinto Coelho wants his country to return to normalcy, in the form of the tough war on drugs that much of the rest of the world conducts. Pinto Coelho is a doctor too. He has run rehab centers and written books about addiction. Now he's at odds with former colleagues and with 'the system,' as he says. His greatest concern is that his country has given up on the idea of a drug-free world. How, Pinto Coelho asks, is it possible to keep young people away from drugs, when everyone knows exactly how many pills can legally be carried around? He still believes deterrents are the best form of prevention and that cold turkey withdrawal is the best treatment method. He is also fighting the extensive methadone program Portugal began as part of its drug policy reform, which now provides tens of thousands of heroin addicts with this substitute drug. These days, Pinto Coelho earns his living running diet clinics, but he spends his evenings writing letters and drafting presentations on his country's 'absurd drug experiment. At home in Portugal, his critical perspective has made him an outsider, but he says he's been well received abroad. As if offering proof, he shows a fact sheet issued by the United States Office of National Drug Control Policy, a brief and skeptically worded report on the Portuguese experiment. In , Portugal broke free from nearly 50 years of military dictatorship, a political shift symbolized by the carnations soldiers stuck in the muzzles of their rifles. He was in his early twenties and 'drugs promised us freedom. But it was a freedom that soon overwhelmed the country. In the s, cheap heroin from Afghanistan and Pakistan began flooding Europe. The number of people taking illegal drugs in Portugal was low compared with other countries, but of those who did consume drugs, an unusually high number of them fell into the category that specialists in this field refer to as 'problem drug users. Flipping through it, he finds the figure he's looking for: , This is the number of severely drug-addicted people in Portugal at the height of the epidemic, in the mids. Portugal's total population at the time was just under 10 million. The number of drug addicts who became infected with HIV was also considerably higher than in most other countries. A drug slum formed in Lisbon, at the edge of a neighborhood known as Casal Ventoso. Here junkies slept in shacks or in the garbage, in extremely poor conditions. Anyone in Portugal could observe this phenomenon -- on TV, in newspaper pictures or even from the nearby highway. Most of the members of the commission were not politicians. Not everyone agrees -- Pinto Coelho, for example. But the anti-drug commission quickly agreed on this position, which formed the basis for Portugal's experiment in dealing with drug users without dealing in deterrents. More surprising is that a Lisbon police commissioner, whose officers spend their days searching for drugs, says it too. The logical extension of this statement is that people who are not criminals should not be treated as criminals. They should not be arrested, put on trial or thrown in jail. The punishment for drug possession in Portugal prior to decriminalization was up to a year in prison. Hashish, cocaine, ecstasy -- Portuguese police still seize and destroy all these substances. Before doing so, though, they first weigh the drugs and consult the official table with the list of day limits. Anyone possessing drugs in excess of these amounts is treated as a dealer and charged in court. Anyone with less than the limit is told to report to a body known as a 'warning commission on drug addiction' within the next 72 hours. In Lisbon, for example, the local drug addiction commission is housed on the first floor of an unremarkable office building. The idea is that no one should feel uncomfortable about being seen here. A year-old in a white polo shirt waits in one room. Police caught him over the weekend with about a gram of hashish. A social worker has already questioned him for half an hour and learned that he attended vocational training at an agricultural school, lives with his parents and smokes pot now and then. This was the first time he was caught in possession of drugs. Next, a psychologist and a lawyer speak to the young man. They want to know if he's aware of the dangers of cannabis. As long as he isn't caught again within the next three months, his case will be closed. But later, asked to explain these consequences in more detail, nothing comes to her mind that sounds particularly serious. A couple days of community service, perhaps. The commission can also impose fines, but the lawyer says it doesn't like to do so for teenagers. The fines are likewise not intended for people the commission determines to be addicts -- they're already paying to maintain their habit. Lisbon police send around 1, people to the commission each year, which averages out to less than five a day. Seventy percent of these cases concern marijuana. Those who fail to turn up receive a couple of reminders, but coercion is not an intended part of this system. Warnings, reminders and invitations to rehab -- it seems Portugal's war on drugs is a gentle one. It is based on decriminalization, which should not be confused with legalization. Portugal considered that path too, but ultimately decided not to take things quite that far. Our entire country will become a drug-ridden slum, these parties said. The left-wing parties in parliament held a majority, though. The data show, among other things, that the number of adults in Portugal who have at some point taken illegal drugs is rising. At the same time, though, the number of teenagers who have at some point taken illegal drugs is falling. The number of drug addicts who have undergone rehab has also increased dramatically, while the number of drug addicts who have become infected with HIV has fallen significantly. What, though, do these numbers mean? With what exactly can they be compared? There isn't a great deal of data from before the experiment began. And, for example, the number of adults who have tried illegal drugs at some point in their lives is increasing in most other countries throughout Europe as well. Still, taking stock after nearly 12 years, his conclusion is, 'Decriminalization hasn't made the problem worse. Decriminalization is pointless, he says, without being accompanied by prevention programs, drug clinics and social work conducted directly on the streets. Frank Zobel works here, analyzing various approaches to combating drugs, and he says he can observe 'the greatest innovation in this field' right outside his office door. No drug policy, Zobel says, can genuinely prevent people from taking drugs -- at least, he is not familiar with any model that works this way. As for Portugal, Zobel says, 'This is working. Drug consumption has not increased severely. There is no mass chaos. For me as an evaluator, that's a very good outcome. Zum Inhalt springen. News Ticker Magazin Audio Account. Warum ist das wichtig? Much the Same as a Parking Violation As part of its war on drugs, Portugal has stopped prosecuting users. Why set the limits on these drugs at 10 days' worth of use, though? At that point, he says, the heroin epidemic was just beginning. The Second Time Brings Consequences In Lisbon, for example, the local drug addiction commission is housed on the first floor of an unremarkable office building. Decriminalization, Not Legalization Warnings, reminders and invitations to rehab -- it seems Portugal's war on drugs is a gentle one. Translated from the German by Ella Ornstein. Portugal Drugs. Die Wiedergabe wurde unterbrochen. Audio Player minimieren. Helfen Sie uns, besser zu werden. Haben Sie einen Fehler im Text gefunden, auf den Sie uns hinweisen wollen? Oder gibt es ein technisches Problem? Melden Sie sich gern mit Ihrem Anliegen. Redaktionellen Fehler melden Technisches Problem melden. Sie haben weiteres inhaltliches Feedback oder eine Frage an uns? Zum Kontaktformular. 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A drugs trafficker who went on the run in Portugal for four years has been jailed after he was tracked down and extradited back to the UK. Stephen Earle, from Huyton in Merseyside, travelled to the country in July in a bid to evade authorities. The year-old had worked closely with his cousin Terence Earle to import large amounts of cocaine and heroin and move them between Merseyside and Motherwell in Scotland, the National Crime Agency said. But he was eventually caught and arrested in the city of Faro in January and extradited on 18 March following a major police operation called Operation Venetic. At Liverpool Crown Court on Friday, Earle was sentenced to 11 years and four months after pleading guilty to four charges of supplying Class A drugs. The pair were part of a gang that police infiltrated after hacking into their encrypted Encrochat messaging network, the Crown Prosecution Service said. They went under the names ThickBoar and Octo-hand, and discussed prices for buying and selling the drugs as well as the logistics of trafficking. NCA branch commander Jon Sayers said: 'This lethal trade is closely linked to exploitation and violence, so bringing this gang to justice has helped protect the public. Terence Earle, 50, was jailed for and-a-half years in April last year. You can also send story ideas to northwest. Skip to content. US Election. Cocaine and heroin smuggler who fled to Portugal jailed. Stephen Earle trafficked large amounts of the drugs into England. National Crime Agency.

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