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National Day of Action on the Overdose Crisis sees protests in cities across Canada

S.J.B.

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2018 National Day of Action on the Overdose Crisis sees protests in Vancouver and cities across Canada
Travis Lupick
The Georgia Straight
February 20th, 2018

Today (February 20) drug users and their allies marched in cities across Canada, including Ottawa, Toronto, and Victoria, as part of a national day of action on drug-overdose deaths.

In Vancouver, some 200 people gathered at Victory Square at West Hastings and Cambie streets.

The crowd was smaller than one that assembled for the same demonstration one year earlier, perhaps owing to today's freezing temperatures. But they marched through the city's downtown core and made enough noise to ensure their message was heard.

The group called for decriminalization: for the federal government to immediately remove criminal penalties for the personal possession of illegal narcotics, including hard drugs like cocaine and heroin.

Jordan Westfall, executive director of the Canadian Association of People Who Use Drugs (CAPUD), addressed the crowd shortly before it began its march, which later ended at the Federal Court building on Georgia Street.

Read the full story here.
 
Advocates gather in downtown Toronto to demand decriminalization of drugs
Muriel Draaisma
CBC
February 20th, 2018

Advocates gathered on a busy downtown corner in Toronto on Tuesday to demand that the federal government decriminalize the use of illicit drugs immediately.

Such a move would help improve the lives of Canadians who face discrimination in health care, housing and employment due to criminal records from drug convictions, said Zoe Dodd, a harm-reduction worker with the Toronto Overdose Prevention Society and the Toronto Harm Reduction Alliance.

The rally, held outside a federal department of justice building near King Street West and University Avenue, was part of a national day of action on the overdose crisis. The day of action was organized by the Canadian Association of People Who Use Drugs.

Dodd, who works at the overdose prevention site in Moss Park, said the situation is disturbing and disheartening and the government could take positive steps now.

"It's carnage and it's just been really painful and hard and difficult and it doesn't seem to feel like there's an end in sight if we don't do something drastic," Dodd said before the rally.

Read the full story here.
 
Montreal protesters argue lives are cut short by drug prohibition
Charlie Fidelman
Montreal Gazette
February 21st, 2018

Protesters carrying signs saying “Injustice is fatal!” laid dozens of white carnations next to a coffin on the steps of Montreal City Hall Tuesday, each representing a life lost to a drug overdose.

A coalition of community groups, crisis workers, activists and drug users held a demonstration demanding the government repeal drug laws that marginalize drug users. They also held a moment of silence — joining several vigils held simultaneously across Canada. The opioid crisis claimed nearly 3,000 lives in 2016, and the estimated death toll last year is pegged at 4,000 people.

“It’s a sad fact that if we are gathered here, it’s because there are too many of us who have died,” said Jean Francois Mary, director of a provincial association that promotes drug users’ health, the Association quebecoise pour la promotion de la sante des personnes utilisatrices de drogues (AQPSUD). “And the number of deaths continue to rise” everywhere, including Quebec.

“It’s obvious that prohibition and the war on drugs is a bitter failure,” he said. Yet governments don’t seem to grasp the scale of what is happening or understand why harm reduction measures taken so far have little impact, Mary said. In the United States alone, 60,000 people have died of opioid-related drug overdoses, and Mexico’s drug cartels are responsible for killing thousands more, he noted.

Only true legalization will work, and that means a total absence of penalties for drug consumption, possession or trafficking, Mary said. It’s the only approach that takes into account the reality of drug consumption, he said.

Read the full story here.
 
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