Australian Capital Territory decriminalises personal-use MDMA, cocaine and heroin
Those caught with small amounts of the substances will not face criminal prosecution
The Australian Capital Territory (ACT) has become the first jurisdiction in Australia to decriminalise the personal possession of illicit drugs such as cocaine, MDMA, heroin, crystal meth and amphetamines.
From October 2023 onwards, those caught with small amounts of the substances will instead be issued with cautions, fines or be referred to a drug diversion program.
Police will have discretion over how to respond to each situation, but fines will be treated as a civil fine – similar to a speeding ticket.
Read this next: The UK government's war-on-drugs policy is out of touch and causing harm
The ACT’s health minister, Rachel Stephen-Smith outlined that the measures would focus on reducing harm rather than punishing drug users. She said: “The ACT has led the nation with a progressive approach to reducing the harm caused by illicit drugs through diversion, health treatment and reducing the stigma for those most vulnerable and at risk in community.
“This sensible reform is based on the expert advice that a health-focused, harm reduction approach delivers the best outcome for people using drugs,” she continued.
“The government will ensure through amendments that the principle of harm reduction is front and centre of our approach to this change.”
Read this next: Bust to boom: How drugs won the war on drugs
A 2021 YourSay survey in Canberra found that nine out of ten residents supported decriminalising drugs
However, decriminalising the drugs did not receive across-the-board support, with the Canberra Liberals’ deputy leader, Jeremy Hanson describing the move as “radical”.
He told ABC NewsABC News: “It’s going to lead to more crime. It’s going to lead to more carnage on our roads.”
The Australian Capital Territory is the area surrounding the country’s capital city – Canberra. It is the smallest mainland territory and home to 454,000 people according to a 2021 census.
***Isaac Muk is Mixmag's Digital Intern, *follow him on Twitter****