Friday, 20th September 2024

Mexico defense chief says legalizing opium 'way out' of violence

Saturday, 6th October 2018

General Salvador Cienfuegos

Mexico’s defence minister General Salvador Cienfuegos said on Friday legalizing opium for medicinal use could contain violence caused by drug gangs fighting over poppy fields and trafficking routes in the country’s southwest.

During a visit to the town of Teloloapan in the crime-ridden state of Guerrero defence minister general, Salvador Cienfuegos had an interaction with the local reporters. A large amount of the heroin trafficked to the United States is produced in this region.

Legalization “is already on the table. I think it can be a way out of the problem,” Cienfuegos said when asked about violence in the state and proposals to regulate opium production in the country.

Olga Sanchez, the designated interior minister of President-elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, has said the next administration will explore regulating opium production for pharmaceutical use.

Guerrero’s governor has backed the idea and state lawmakers sent a draft bill to the federal congress in August.

“But it is a subject that will have to be debated. In principle, it seems to me that it is correct,” Cienfuegos said.

He expressed worries about how to guarantee the safety of farmers if they stop selling drugs to gangs and start providing opium to the government in order to produce morphine.

Leftist Lopez Obrador, who won July’s election by a landslide and takes office on Dec. 1, is proposing major changes to the drug war strategy. He has suggested a negotiated peace and amnesty for non-violent drug dealers, traffickers and farmers.

Lopez Obrador is expected to name a new defense minister to replace Cienfuegos soon.

Mexico has been mired for nearly 12 years in a bloody, military-led battle against drug gangs. Cartels have fragmented into warring groups and murders have risen to record levels.

The legalisation of opium products has been seen as the solution for the high crime rate problem across the world.