Contents
- Feb. 2012 - Dianova USA Provides Needed Services to Newark's Families
- Sept. 2011 - My Experience at the "Marathon de Montréal" - 2011 edition, by Kelvin B.
- Sept. 2011 - Supervised Injection: Vancouver's Insite Facility Allowed to Operate by Supreme Court
- Sept. 2011 - Community Network: A Tribute to Sylvain
- September 2011 - Dianova's Big Charity Sale Announced
- September 2011 - "Empowering my Life" New Corporate Video
- June 2011 - Bolivia Withdraws from UN Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs
- June 2011 - The Global Commission on Drug Policy Declares the Global War on Drugs a Failure
- May 2011 - Head of State Visits Dianova Center in Chile
- May 2010 - Dianova to Represent Civil Society as a Member of the Organization of the American States
- April 2010 - The Minister for Social Services, Mrs. Lise Thériault, announced the draft regulations on the certification of resources in drug and gambling addiction
- March 2010 - Information about the Earthquake in Chile and the Situation of Dianova in Chile
- June 2009 - World Drug Report by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
- April 2009 - Dianova endorses an open letter to express opposition to bill C-15
- November 2008 - Affordable housing, Dianova puts its shoulder to the wheel
- September 2008 - A visit by Dianova international
- July, 2008 - "Beyond 2008" NGO's meet in Vienna (Austria)
- April 2008 - UN agency lashes Canada over crack pipe programs
- January 2008 - Dianova honored by Spanish Red Cross
- July 2007 - Dianova International granted special consultative status by the United Nations
- June 2007 - Countries urged by UN to provide greater health care to drug addicts
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bolivia withdraws from u.n. single convention
Bolivia is set to withdraw from an international narcotics convention in protest at its classification of coca leaves as an illegal drug. President Evo Morales, who is also the leader of one of the country’s main coca producers’ unions, has asked Congress to pass a law that would take Bolivia out of the 1961 United Nations Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs.
The government says that the convention contravenes the Bolivian constitution, which states that the country is obliged to preserve and protect the chewing of coca leaves as a cultural heritage and ancestral practice.
Bolivia has long argued that coca in its natural state is not an illicit drug. The plant is legally grown in the country for medicinal and traditional purposes. An international attempt to remove its chewing from the UN list failed in January, so the government now wants to withdraw from the convention altogether.
Under the draft law, which has already passed the lower chamber of Congress and is likely to pass in the Senate, where Morales’s party has a two-thirds majority, Bolivia would keep its international obligations in the fight against drug trafficking. Foreign minister David Choquehuanca said the country could rejoin the convention next year, but with a reservation: that it be allowed to consume coca legally.
"[This] is an attempt to keep the cultural and inoffensive practice of coca chewing and to respect human rights, but not just of indigenous people, because this is an ancient practice of all Bolivian people," Choquehuanca said.
Opposition politicians argue that the government is surrendering to traffickers.
"Internationally, we’re giving a bad impression as a country," said opposition congressman Mauricio Muñoz. "There will be disastrous and irreversible consequences for Bolivia. And we think this is the wrong path the president is taking, not to fight drug trafficking head on."
Bolivia is the third largest coca producer in the world, much of which is diverted for making cocaine for Brazilian and European markets. But while recently admitting that coca cultivation has grown in the country, Bolivia maintains that it cannot defeat drug traffickers without a reduction in the consumption of cocaine in the west.
TNI/WOLA support Bolivian Decision
"The Transnational Institute and the Washington Office in Latin America (TNI/WOLA) express their full understanding and support for the decision taken by the Morales administration, with the approval of the Bolivian legislature. After its proposed amendment was rejected, Bolivia had no other choice but to withdraw from the Convention, given the need to reconcile its international treaty obligations with the country’s new 2009 Constitution, which allows for a period of four years for the government to “denounce and, in that case, renegotiate the international treaties that may be contrary to the Constitution.”
"According to the 2009 Constitution: “The State shall protect native and ancestral coca as cultural patrimony, a renewable natural resource of Bolivia’s biodiversity, and as a factor of social cohesion; in its natural state it is not a narcotic. It’s revaluing, production, commercialization and industrialization shall be regulated by law” (article 384).
"The restrictions placed by the Single Convention on the coca leaf and its traditional uses – in the absence of any evidence of its harmfulness, were an historical error and a violation of indigenous rights. The other procedure available under the treaty to correct this error – apart from the amendment that was already rejected – is a World Health Organization (WHO) review of the classification of the coca leaf. Bolivia considers that the outcome of such a WHO procedure would likely take too long to comply with the four-year Constitutional deadline.
"We call on the international community to express understanding and support for the decision taken by the Bolivian government. Other countries with comparable legal conflicts regarding the status of the coca leaf, such as Peru, Colombia and Argentina, would be well-advised to follow Bolivia’s step and/or to initiate the long overdue WHO review."
The Network News Briefs
The Dianova Network
Established in 11 countries of Europe and the Americas, the Dianova network is composed of non-profit member NGO's that are dedicated to providing social programs and developing innovative initiatives in the fields of youth development, education and addiction prevention and treatment (misuse or abuse of alcohol and other drugs).
- Dianova International
- Canada
- Spain
- Italy
- Portugal
- Sweden
- Nicaragua
- Chile
- Uruguay
- USA
- Switzerland
- Drustvo Up (Slovenia)
Dianova around the world
Dianova International Granted Consultative Status to the ECOSOC
During its Substantive Session of July 2007, the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) voted to grant Dianova International "Special Consultative Status".
Nicaragua, Hotel Europeo
The activities developed by Dianova Nicaragua are financed by donations and with the profits earned by Hotel Europeo. This 3 star, well renown hotel is located downtown capital city Managua, in a colorful environment. It offers comfortable equipments and a delicious, local cuisine.
By taking vacations in Hotel Europeo you support Dianova's commitment in the country !
