News Source: Mail Online UK
| 3 days ago
19 May 2013 Latin American countries could stop deploying law enforcement agencies to fight cartels after concluding that the human costs of the 'war on drugs' is just too high. That is just one of the scenarios envisaged in a 'gamechanging' report
News Source: Rediff
| 3 months ago
Allahabad station Write a comment February 10, 2013 19:55 Delhi polls Aam Admi Party's litmus test: Bhushan : The upcoming Delhi assembly elections will be a litmus test for the Aam Aadmi Party, before the new political outfit sets its eyes on the
News Source: The Guardian
| 4 months ago
Guatemala's President Otto Perez Molina says his country bears terrible scars from the war on drugs. Photograph: Johan Ordonez/AFP/Getty Images In any war there are innocent victims. In the 40-year war on drugs, the central American state of
News Source: The Daily Star
| 4 months ago
The Daily Star The last two months have witnessed more far-reaching changes on the drug-policy scene in Latin America and the U.S. than in all previous decades combined. Three fundamental shifts have occurred, each of which would be important on its
News Source: Russia Today
| 6 months ago
Eleven Secret Service agents have been relieved from their duties in light of claims they spent time set aside for planning President Obama's visit drinking and visiting prostitutes. Published: 06 December, 2012, 13:29 People take part in a "
News Source: Daily News & Analysis
| 8 months ago
The presidents of Mexico, Colombia and Guatemala all called for a vigorous global debate of anti-narcotics laws at the United Nations on Wednesday, raising new questions about the wisdom of the four-decade-old, US-led "war on drugs."...United Nations
News Source: The Courier-Mail
| 8 months ago
American leaders have called for a new approach to the war on drugs, saying the current drive to crush powerful cartels has failed to reduce consumption. "The premise of our fight against drugs has proven to have serious flaws," Guatemala's President
News Source: SF Gate
| 8 months ago
Monday Wall Street Journal Asia, Hong Kong Protests against Japan Angry crowds across China ransacked Japanese businesses, smashed Japanese cars and pelted Tokyo's embassy in Beijing with eggs and plastic bottles in weekend protests over disputed