The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) has said that the move by the Nigerian Senate to impose the death penalty for drug trafficking offenders would not yield the desired result.
UNODC Country Representative, Oliver Stolpe, said this at a two-day Media Personnel Training organised in collaboration with the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) and other partners on Tuesday in Abuja.
The training is centred on anti-corruption, Police Accountability, Wildlife Crime and Sensitisation on Drugs Prevention, Treatment and Care, (DPTC).
“Our stance as UN is clear on the death penalty we are principally and categorically against it. And from a very practical viewpoint, I have to say, it doesn’t make sense,” he said.
Stolpe maintained that the UN had always advocated for a clear distinction between crimes of drug trafficking as opposed to the issue of drug use.
He said that it was always considered primarily to be a health issue saying that it should be dealt with as such.
According to him, addiction is a health condition, it is not a choice.”
On the need for updated drug data for Nigerians, Stolpe observed that the current national drug survey for Nigeria was last done six years ago, (2018), and therefore does not reflect the current situation for Nigeria.
He said “The drug use survey of 2018 remains as far as I can tell the most cited study in the media.
“This data is outdated and I think a very critical question that media could ask at that point is really well, how can we still refer to 2018 data to describe today’s levels of drug use?”
Stolpe enjoined the media to keep up the good work while ensuring that information was disseminated efficiently and effectively.
NAN