All the same just over 98% of the polled people charged with drug abuse 
and intent to sell drugs said they had persuaded 3 to 7 persons to start 
using drugs. In more than 70% of such cases, a special effort was made to 
invite potential "victims" to homes belonging to different persons. These 
people received remuneration for granting premises especially arranged for 
this purpose and where conditions were conducive for the use of narcotics. 
Practically one out of every 4 persons charged with drug abuse but without 
attempting to push drugs, admitted in talking to officials, that he had 
persuaded at least 3 or 4 persons to use drugs treating them to narcotics 
that he had bought or made for his own use. 
    What is more, 37% of the examined complaints and statements by citizens 
addressed to various agencies, especially, those made directly to the local 
police officers have remained unread, though they specifically mentioned 
people who had turned their homes into drug pads. 
                                                        Negative Tendencies: 
    All these facts highlight: 1) an increase of the degree in danger posed 
to the public by drug-related crimes; 2) the appearance of new narcotics, 
giving way to diversity of drugs; 3) increase in the number of people 
involved in the use of narcotics through persuasion; 4) the rising level of 
organization of such crimes; 5) the expanding boundaries of illegal drug 
trafficking on the world- wide scale; 6) an increase in the number of 
illegal labs used to make drugs; 7) the perfection of methods used for 
selling drugs and an increase in the establishment of illegal and semi- 
legal shops intended for selling drugs; 8) the rising number of cases of 
illegal acquisition, including theft of narcotics from medical 
institutions; 9) the increase in numbers of corrupt officials involved in 
illegal drug trafficking; 10) the greater degree of masked laundering of 
money; 12) and a higher degree of latency of drug-related crimes. 
    The danger to the public from drug-related crimes is manifested by an 
increase of crimes committed for the sake of selling drugs, and, second, by 
the total quantity of narcotics in circulation. 
    The appearance new drug substances and the corresponding rise in 
variety of drugs is reflected in the constant growth of the List of 
Narcotics (narcotic substances and drug medicines both synthetic and 
natural) produced by the UN International Drug Control Committee. 
    The spreading of the cultivation of drug-bearing plants in places, 
which are, difficult to physically access is confirmed by the discovery of 
plantations sown with such plants in various regions of the world. These 
discoveries have been made with the help of space and aerial photography. 
    The fact that the ever-larger number of people use narcotics is 
manifested in the rising figure of medical patients using drugs and 
recreational drug users. The growing number of drug patients is registered 
by statistics and the rise in numbers of recreational drug users is evident 
from opinion polls among experts (medics at outpatient clinics for addicts 
and law enforcement officers who specialize in combating drug-related 
crimes). 
    The greater degree of organization in drug-related crimes is manifested 
by the growth of criminal groups and associations, in the setting up of 
syndicates and cartels, in the toughening of discipline within syndicates 
and cartels and in the rising cohesion of their members and the 
coordination of their actions. Tougher methods of pressure are exerted on 
members violating the rules of conduct within groups. Criminal groups, 
associations, syndicates, and cartels are also placed under control along 
with the people who commit drug related crimes on their own. 
    The expanding boundaries of illegal drug trafficking on the 
international scale are evident in the fact that drugs are smuggled into 
practically all the countries of the world. This smuggling includes 
attempts to carry drug consignments through the customs and across national 
borders of a number of countries by various means and by different kinds of 
transportation. This has been established by controlling deliveries of 
narcotics and by polling experts (law-enforcement and customs officers). 
    Law-enforcement agencies in various countries discovered the rise in 
the number of drug-making labs and new methods of selling and circulating 
drugs. Shops that were camouflaged as book or perfume stores have been 
seized. 
                              Corruption – as a Way to Protect Drug Dealers: 
    Growing number of corrupt officials, aspiring for higher posts tend to 
improve methods to protect persons taking part in illegal drug trafficking. 
Polled experts and narcotic squad police officers, admitted that over the 
last few years, there was a rise in the number of requests to them by high 
ranking officials suggesting that criminal responsibility be lifted from 
persons involved in drug deals and against whom suits had been filed. 
    Ever more sophisticated methods to legalize the money from drug 
trafficking is manifested by laundering such money which makes it 
difficult, impossible at times, to trace its primary source. At present one 
can speak of the three major methods. First, cash is put into financial 
institutions or into retail trade and is immediately converted into foreign 
currencies or transferred abroad. Second, there is a stratification of the 
money, i.e. increasing the number of transactions that are often carried 
out in several countries to obscure the source of the illegally earned 
money. And, third, illegal earnings are integrated into investments in 
economic operations with the aim of making the money look legal. 
    The polled experts, and the narcotic police squad officers explained 
the increased latency of drug-related crimes by the following examples. 
There is mutual interest in keeping crimes a secret both among drug-pushers 
and addicts; none of them have any desire to cooperate with the law- 
enforcement agencies. There are special mutually beneficial and inter- 
dependent relations between users and suppliers of narcotics. This kind of 
relationship requires thorough secrecy due to the fear of criminal 
punishment for both users and suppliers. Small wonder that the addicts 
taken to hospitals, often in critical conditions, dangerous to their life 
and health, do not reveal, as a rule, the source of getting drugs. And this 
silence is due not to some sort of moral principles, honor, duty or 
solidarity but rather, in most cases, to the fear of losing the already 
established drug source or to the fear of being victimized for revealing 
the source. Also much is yet to be done to develop proper legal, personnel, 
tactical, material and technical programs that are effective in combating 
drug trade. There is the obvious need to find a way to expose latent drug- 
related crimes. For without realizing the actual state of affairs with drug- 
related crimes, adequate measures of combating them will remain 
insufficient. 
  Chapter II. System and Classification of Measures to Overcome Drug Abuse 
              Par. 1. System of Measures to Overcome Drug Abuse 
    Drug abuse is a socially dangerous and complicated phenomenon. Narco- 
crime, particularly, should be countered by a rigid system of measures. 
    These combine numerous and diversified steps having social, legal, 
criminological, economic, ecological, organizational and international 
aspects. The word system is understood as "a whole consisting of parts, a 
combination; ...a great number of elements bearing a relation to each 
other, connected with each other, forming a sort of integrity or unity. 
    The system of measures for overcoming drug abuse is comprised of many 
steps bearing relation to each other. 
                                  System of Measures to Overcome Drug Abuse: 
    The diversity of such measures, their relationships and contacts can be 
illustrated by law practices, law-making and law enforcement, as well as by 
the crime prevention theories both on domestic and international scales. 
For example, a comprehensive inter-disciplinary action program to prevent 
the spread of drug addiction submitted for discussion at the international 
antidrug conference in Vienna in July 1987 contained more than 400 articles 
and recommendations to governments and organizations as to how this 
negative phenomenon should be overcome. 
    The UN international program for combating drugs for the years 1994 and 
1995, 1995 and 1996 comprises 298 projects featuring various aspects, 
directions and measures for checking the spread of drugs. 216 out of them 
were carried through in 1994 and 1995 and the implementation of the 
remaining 82 projects is underway. The total dollar amount of resources 
mobilized for the fulfillment of these projects is estimated at US$ 
484,397,800. The sum was allocated by the UN International Antidrug 
Program's Fund. 
    The Concept of the Russian Federation government's policy on drug 
control, endorsed by decision No 5494 of the Supreme Soviet of the Russian 
Federation on July 22nd 1993, incorporates quite a few antidrug measures 
from those developed by the world community and registered by international 
conventions and in other documents. This Concept emphasizes the measures 
that have been tested and are successfully utilized. 
    Since the system of measures against drug abuse is too complicated the 
discussion of its contents is related, firstly, to the general 
characterization of its components and, secondly, to the classification of 
these measures in their relation to each other. 
Basic Aspects of Measures to Overcome Drug Abuse: 
    The measures against drug abuse have some social, legal, 
criminological, medical, biological, political, economic, ecological, 
organizational and international aspects. Although these aspects have 
different spheres of application, they still remain interrelated. For 
example, measures for curing drug addicts have medical, social and legal 
aspects to them; measures for combating drug-related crimes have legal, 
criminological, social and other aspects; measures for combating money 
laundering have legal, social, economic, international and other aspects 
and so on. So, each particular aspect can be discussed only in abstract 
terms. This approach to the definition and description of aspects makes it 
possible to give a full characterization of the system of measures against 
drug abuse. 
                                                           Social Dimension: 
    The social dimension is the cornerstone of all other aspects. All the 
antidrug measures are permeated with it. There is a correlation between the 
social aspect and each of the other aspects. It is either a general element 
in relation to something specific such as medical measures, or the whole of 
something, which represents a part such as criminological measures. It can 
also be a content when the other represents a form, as in legal measures. 
In short, the social aspect can be regarded as a common for all antidrug 
measures. Additionally there are legal measures for making those involved 
in drug-related crimes answerable for their actions and for intensifying 
the customs' control over the shipment of drugs across borders. 
                                                            Legal Dimension: 
    The legal aspect of the measures under consideration can be seen as a 
totality of legal norms including international conventions against drugs 
and determining the degree of a judicial responsibility for them, mainly, 
criminal and administrative; secondly, regulating various legal 
relationships arising from drug use, thirdly, ensuring a compulsory 
treatment for drug addicts who try to avoid it and, fourthly, referring to 
these or other substances as narcotics. 
                                                   Criminological Dimension: 
    The criminological aspect comprises measures aiming to overcome narco- 
crime, as a totality of drug-related crimes. These measures aim to study, 
analyze and sum up the structure and dynamics of these crimes and their 
latency. In addition, they aim to establish the causal complex of the given 
crime and determine the content, nature and direction of actions aimed at 
removing or neutralizing the causes conducive to the commitment of drug- 
related crimes. Thirdly, they aim to disclose and fix typical features, 
traits and qualities of an individual guilty of committing this or that 
crime. Lastly, they aim to develop methods for preventing drug-related 
crimes. 
                                                          Medical Dimension: 
    The medical (biological) aspect involves the improvement of 
narcological aid and methods for curing drug addicts, the need to increase 
the level of professional medical training for those engaged in treating 
addicts and persons taking drugs without a doctor's prescription and the 
development of new medicines and medical equipment for treating addicts. 
                                                        Political Dimension: 
    The political aspect involves combating narco-business, which tries to 
undermine the foundations of state power, weaken the entire machinery of 
state and diminish the nation's trust in the government. 
    Some juridical works make it a point that organized crime opposes legal 
actions of top government bodies not only by committing crimes but also by 
bending administration officials to the will of criminal associations so 
that they could protect criminal activities. 
    The resistance of narco-business to government lawful actions can 
result in attempts to undermine the foundations of state and in the re- 
orientation and distortion of any country's policy. So, central to the 
political aspect of measures against narco-business is blocking the 
influence of drug dealers on the national policy by barring nomination of 
corrupt officials to key posts in the government. 
                                                         Economic Dimension: 
    There are two facets- retrospective and perspective of the economic 
aspect of measures against drug abuse. The retrospective facet, on the one 
hand, involves direct expenses of the state to combat narcotics, and, on 
the other, the lost benefits to citizens as a result of the spread of drug 
addiction. 
    Direct expenses include sizeable resources taken out from the state 
budget to set up and maintain various medical and educational centers for 
handicapped children, including those who inherited health problems from 
their parents suffering from drug addiction. In addition this includes 
expenses to support internal affairs agencies, customs officers engaged in 
combating the proliferation of drugs, production of special equipment for 
identifying drugs, as well as production of medicines for drug users. 
Finally, the direct expenses are used to promote international cooperation 
in joint antidrug actions with the United Nations Organization, Interpol 
and other international agencies and carry out research in the field of 
medicine, psychiatry, psychology and law, and to conduct an antidrug 
education. 
    The cost to society is revealed in an increase in the number of 
physically handicapped and mentally retarded people, victims of narcotics. 
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