2012 04 UK

Page 1

FREE 18+ For adults only. Soft Secrets is published six times a year by Discover Publisher BV Netherlands

Issue 4 - 2012

100 Years of the International Drug War

by Sativa Diva

In this issue:

AutoFem’s making people Think Different ›› 14 DON’T GET COMPLACENT! When you’re new to something, you make mistakes; it’s a fact of life. You learn to write, you make a few spelling mistakes. You learn to drive, you dent a few bumpers. You learn to grow, you kill a few plants. We’ve all been there. Soft Secrets keeps you focused. ››

18

Colombia Travel Report ›› 42

In 1909 the US assembled 12 other nations in Shanghai for a meeting known as the International Opium Commission. The multi-country unification of drug control policy was a result of intense international pressure placed upon the Chinese government due to their large-scale opium export. This led to another, even more effective policy-writing assembly, one that would permanently define our society’s modern history of – and relationship with – drugs. Last month marked the centennial of the signing of a single document, ushering in 100 years of ‘war’ on drugs around the world. The International Opium Convention formalized the International Opium Conference, attended by representatives of the US, the Netherlands, Italy, the UK, France, Germany, Portugal, Russia, China, Japan, Persia (Iran) and Siam (Thailand), and was signed on the 23rd of January, 1912. Hosted by the Hague, the Conference established the world’s first official international drug policy agreement.

the mid-1920s, again signing and ratifying the treaty (between then and 1949, seven more nations would join.) The Convention was revised in Geneva in 1925; this version simultaneously took effect and was registered in the League of Nations Treaty Series (for the second time) three years later. It established a ‘Permanent Central

By 1915 the document had been implemented in the US, Holland, Norway, China and Honduras; four years later the Convention applied globally after being incorporated into the Treaty of Versailles. Every country in the world was now expected to control the distribution, cultivation/production, importation or exportation, or sale of opium, morphine, heroin or cocaine – or any alternative form of these drugs. In 1922 the document was registered in the League of Nations Treaty Series. Nearly 60 countries had become members by

tries was clarified, and finally provided with a statistical, measurable system. Concurrently Egypt, supported by the US and China, implored for hashish to be incorporated into the list of prohibited drugs. The addendum dictated that: “The use of Indian hemp and the preparations derived therefrom may only be author-

Sadhu offering charas to Shiva in India (Photo: Mannaseejah)

Opium Board’, under the auspices of the League of Nations. The ‘control’ that member nations were expected to exhort over their local drug indus-

ized for medical and scientific purposes.” It went on to recommend addiContinues on page 3


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
2012 04 UK by SoftSecrets - Issuu