Poland shuts legal high shops
This news comes one week after the post Legal high madness in Poland.
The Polish government announced Monday that it has shut down around a thousand stores that sold newly-emerging synthetic drugs, such as mephedrone and preparations containing synthetic cannabinoids (marketed under names like Spice and K2 in the US). It is also moving to amend its drug laws to cover such substances.
"The state will not flinch when it comes to using all legal means available in the struggle against these substances," Justice Minister Krzysztof Kwiatkowski told reporters Monday. "This is going to be a long and difficult fight because our opponent is extremely well-prepared, rich and determined," said Kwiatkowski.
The synthetic drugs have made headlines in Poland in recent weeks, with several users being hospitalized. There have also been a handful of deaths that have been attributed to the synthetics, though the actual connection between use of the substances and the deaths remains unclear.
In an operation beginning last week, police and health inspectors sealed the doors of stores selling the drugs. But that was just the beginning, Kwiatkowski said. He said the government would enact legislation to plug loopholes in the existing drug law, including adding a three-year prison sentence for anyone who supplies minors with a substance posing a risk to their health or life. Another proposed amendment would allow health inspectors to pull from the shelves for up to 18 months any substance suspected of being harmful.
It won't be without a fight. The owner of a chain of shops selling the new synthetics told the newspaper Polska he planned to sue over the state's closure of his shops.
[Thanks Tomas!]
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It's curious that smart drugs have been around for a few years and only lately a real outpour of hospitalizations and even suspected deaths is observed. I just don't feel able to trust all that every-drug-is-bad-except-the-nondrug-alcohol popaganda, so I suspect some not fully fair reasons must be involved... like attributing every hospitalization of someone who had tried a legal high to the substance itself. Lately some man died and had a smart drug baggie in his pocket - however, the autopsy revealed he wasn't under the influence of any drug and he actually had some heart disease...
It's starting to resemble the "LSD damaging chromosomes" panic from the 60s.* When politicians and doctors are actively and even furiously looking for any proof of a drug's high risk, they are likely to take just about anything as proof.
* Maybe "FROM the 60s" isn't so well said - this belief seems to live on, at least I have encountered it.
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