Swiss Voters Reject Attempt to Legalize Hard, Soft Drugs - Los Angeles Times
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Swiss Voters Reject Attempt to Legalize Hard, Soft Drugs

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From Associated Press

The Swiss on Sunday voted overwhelmingly against legalizing heroin and other narcotics, apparently heeding government warnings that the proposed law would turn their pristine Alpine nation into a drug haven.

With all ballots counted, 74% voted against a constitutional amendment that would make legal “the consumption, cultivation or possession of drugs, and their acquisition for personal use.â€

In favor were 26%, or 454,404 people.

Last year, the Swiss were the first in the world to vote overwhelmingly in favor of state distribution of heroin to hardened addicts.

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“The outcome shows that the Swiss population rejects extreme solutions to the drug problem,†said Felix Gutwiller, a pioneer of the heroin distribution program.

The government opposed the plan, saying it was a health risk and would turn Switzerland into a haven for drug tourists and traffickers. It said the current policy of helping hard-core addicts while clamping down on dealers was best.

Church groups, police chiefs, social workers, doctors and other professionals working with addicts held similar views.

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No other European nation, not even the Netherlands, has legalized the possession or sale of any drugs or has plans to do so.

The pro-legalization lobby--a loose left-wing coalition that gathered the necessary 100,000 signatures to force a referendum--claimed it would stamp out trafficking and the black market.

Backers hoped that a large turnout in their favor would persuade the government to relax laws on soft drugs like marijuana.

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Francois Reusser, from the pro-legalization lobby, blamed the scale of the defeat on the fact that the proposed law included both hard and soft drugs.

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