SG/SM/12969-OBV/892-SOC/NAR/940

Work to Achieve Millennium Development Goals, Fight Illicit Drugs ‘Must Go Hand-in-Hand’, Says Secretary-General in Message on Day

22 June 2010
Secretary-GeneralSG/SM/12969
OBV/892
SOC/NAR/940
Department of Public Information • News and Media Division • New York

Work to Achieve Millennium Development Goals, Fight Illicit Drugs

 

‘Must Go Hand in Hand’, Says Secretary-General in Message on Day

 


Following is UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s message for the International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking, to be observed 26 June:


As we prepare for this September’s United Nations Summit on the Millennium Development Goals, we must recognize the major impediment to development posed by drug abuse and illicit trafficking.  As this year’s theme stresses, it is time to “Think Health, Not Drugs”.


Drug abuse poses significant health challenges.  Injecting drug use is a leading cause of the spread of HIV.  In some parts of the world, heroin use and HIV have reached epidemic proportions.  Drug control — including prevention and measures to reduce the harmful effects of drug use — is therefore an important part of the battle to combat HIV/AIDS.


Drugs are a threat to the environment.  Coca cultivation destroys vast swathes of Andean rain forest — the lungs of our planet —— as well as national parks.  Chemicals used to make cocaine poison local streams.


The illicit drug trade also undermines governance, institutions and societal cohesion.  Drug traffickers typically seek routes where the rule of law is weak.  In turn, drug-related crime deepens vulnerability to instability and poverty.


To break this vicious circle, it is essential to promote development in drug-growing regions.  Our work to achieve the Millennium Development Goals and fight drugs must go hand in hand.  In seeking to eradicate illicit crops, we must also work to wipe out poverty.


Recent worrying trends — in parts of West Africa and Central America — show how drug trafficking can threaten the security, and even the sovereignty, of States.  That is why the United Nations is putting a stronger emphasis on enhancing justice and fighting crime in peacebuilding and peacekeeping operations.


National Governments must also do their part.  I urge all States to become parties to the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime.  I also call on States to live up to their commitments, as Parties to the United Nations Convention against Corruption, to strengthen integrity and reduce the corruption that facilitates the drug trade.


On this International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking, let us reaffirm our commitment to this shared responsibility within our communities and among the family of nations.


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For information media • not an official record
For information media. Not an official record.