On behalf of my delegation, I wish to join the previous speakers
in expressing our congratulations on your election and to assure you of our full
cooperation as you guide the Committee’’s work this year. I take this occasion
to convey the Holy See’’s continuing appreciation for the work of the United
Nations, this Third Committee, and in particular the work of United Nations
Office on Drugs and Crime in the prevention, reduction and suppression of
illicit drug abuse.
In all of its phases and dimensions, the illicit drug scourge
robs the human person of his or her innate dignity. My delegation notes with
special concern the ever more obvious links between the illicit drug trade and
other human tragedies, such as the trafficking of human beings, the
proliferation of illicit small arms, organized crime, and terrorism. The plague
of drugs is not unlike an unweeded garden, whose devastation and spoiling effect
know no political, geographical, or socio-economic boundaries.
As it has been mentioned by other distinguished delegations in
this Committee, developing countries and populations afflicted by poverty are
particularly vulnerable to the devastating trickle-down effects of the drug
trade as easy trafficking points or inexpensive cultivators of source crops. It
is for this reason that my delegation welcomes development projects that offer
farmers profitable and viable alternatives to drug cultivation. These
alternative development projects require comprehensive rural development
programs, with stable infrastructures, appropriate technology and basic health
care, education and so forth. Definitely, the problem of drug cultivation and
illicit trafficking is not unrelated to the issues of sustainable human
development as envisioned in the Millennium Development Goals.
Mr. Chairman, my delegation would like to echo the statement
offered by UNODC Executive Director in the 2003 Global Survey on Ecstasy and
Amphetamines who called for the need for Global Social Change to truly reverse
the alarming upward trends seen in the production and abuse of synthetic drugs,
especially by young people throughout the world. With production of
Amphetamine-type stimulants (ATS) estimated at just over 500 tons a year and
more than 40 million people having used them in the past 12 months, the Holy See
is especially concerned that the permanent health damages, including lasting
impact on brain functions, caused by ATS is not fully understood and duly
addressed.
My delegation would also like to thank the Executive Director of
UNODC, Mr. Antonio Maria Costa, for drawing special attention, in his opening
remarks, to the importance of demand reduction measures that take a balanced and
integrated approach, in accordance with UN drug conventions and the goals set
out by the 20th Special Session of the General Assembly. In light of
such an approach to demand reduction, the Holy See would like to highlight one
of the key means that can contribute to effective prevention of drug abuse. That
is, the role of the family.
In fact, the 2003 Report on the World Social Situation rightly
stresses the importance of the family in addressing the questions of social
vulnerability and risk affecting especially "young people living in so-called
dysfunctional families, characterized by conflict, inadequate parental control,
weak ties with other members of the extended family and community, and premature
autonomy".
As the many causes and consequences of dependence on
psychotropic substances are related to family dynamics, prevention, treatment
and rehabilitation, efforts should target family relationships in their
biological, psychological, social, cultural and economic dimensions. Moreover,
since the family forms the very basis of a society, illicit drug abuse can
destroy the social fabric of a community and even destabilize a civil society.
A great number of researches clearly demonstrate a link between
strong family bonds and the prevention of drug abuse by children. The family is
usually the first to suffer from both the acute and the long-term consequences
of substance-abusing members, a tragic situation which in most cases leads to
the disequilibrium in the household relationship and finally to the breakdown of
the family.
The family is the first environment where a child learns various
habits. Nurturing parenting practices, such as involvement in their children’’s
daily activities and open communications within the family, contribute to
healthy social behavior in childhood and adolescence. Often, the simple act of
parents sharing a meal regularly with their children has proven effective in
reducing the likelihood of experimentation with drugs.
Mr. Chairman, in preparation for the observance of the tenth
anniversary of the International Year of the Family in 2004, my delegation
wishes to encourage the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, as well as
intergovernmental and nongovernmental organizations, research and academic
institutions, to work closely with the Social Policy Division of the Department
of Economic and Social Affairs by exploring and sharing experiences and findings
that could strengthen the central role of the family in drug prevention.
The phenomenon of the growing use and increasing abuse of
narcotic and psychotropic substances has assumed tragic dimensions. It is
especially worrying to note that this social ill affects thousands of young
people, which implies enormous consequences for the future of society. The Holy
See is confident that the international community will not fail to heed what so
many young people are trying to say through their tragedies and anguished
appeals, and will redouble its efforts in helping the young generation to
liberate itself from this deadly phenomenon of narcotics abuse because the
future of youth signifies the future of all humanity.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.