The diploma, which “clarifies the sanctioning regime relating to the possession of drugs for consumption regardless of the quantity and establishes regular deadlines for updating regulatory standards”, was promulgated by the President of the Republic, Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, on August 31, after the Constitutional Court validated the diploma, and published it in the Diário da República on September 8 and came into force on 1 October.
The new law updates the 1993 decree-law, which approves the legal regime applicable to the trafficking and consumption of narcotic drugs and psychotropic substances, to prevent situations of inequality between New Psychoactive Substances (NSP) and synthetic drugs and distinguish traffickers from consumers.
The diploma determines that, if the acquisition and possession of drugs exceeds "the quantity necessary for average individual consumption during a period of 10 days, it constitutes evidence that the purpose may not be consumption”, but rather trafficking, when previously the maximum limit was five days.
Even if the acquisition or possession of the substances exceeds a quantity greater than the consumption of 10 days, the court may decide that the drugs are "intended exclusively for personal consumption", in which case it may close the case, decide not to prosecute the accused or acquit them and refer them instead to a commission for the deterrence of drug addiction.
Controversy
At the time of the discussion, the new law generated some controversy, including requests for “consideration” from the Minister of Internal Administration, José Luís Carneiro, and “a lot of caution” from the Minister of Health, Manuel Pizarro.
In the debate held at the beginning of July, PSD and PS justified the diplomas on the decriminalisation of synthetic drugs with the need to distinguish between dealers and consumers, to guard against situations of inequality between new psychoactive substances and classic drugs.
According to the “European Drug Report 2022: Trends and developments”, almost seven tonnes of synthetic drugs were seized in 2020, substances that are sold for their psychoactive properties, but are not controlled under international drug conventions.
“There is also concern about the growing crossover between the markets for illicit drugs and new psychoactive substances. (…) These developments mean that consumers may be exposed, without knowing it, to potent substances that can increase the risk of fatal or non-fatal overdose episodes”, warned the report.
The same report indicated that at the end of 2021, the European Monitoring Center for Drugs and Drug Addiction was monitoring around 880 new psychoactive substances, of which 52 were reported for the first time in Europe in 2021.
In my humble opinion synthetic drugs should not only be decriminalised but also its sale made legal. That's the only way to control quality. Youth death rate has been growing on double digits with synthetic opioids due to the impurity of drugs in the black market. Consuming quality synthetic drugs occasionally it's not worse than consuming alcohol or tobacco daily.
By André from Alentejo on 02 Oct 2023, 20:32
@André, I would recommend a trip to San Francisco. Similarly well intentioned "harm reduction" laws that effectively decriminalised synthetic drugs have led to a 10 fold increase in overdose and the city is rife with the now notorious "living dead" walking the streets.
By Alex from Algarve on 03 Oct 2023, 10:21
A very dark day for Portugal and for young people in particular. Nothing good will come of this, just ruined lives. Watch what happens.
By Russell Hicks from UK on 03 Oct 2023, 11:36
@Alex, I have been to San Francisco, I know what you mean but it is still a paradise compared with some neighborhoods in Lisbon such as Casal Ventoso in the 90s which was literally a drug addict campsite with streets full of tents, needles, spoons, lemon peels and half counscious people laying all around. People would travel from my town about 40km away to get and consume drugs there. The decriminalisation in 2000 and programs such as methadone replacement was key to completely reverse the situation (just make a visit to that neighborhood today). What I suggest is beyond that, and to prevent that my children die from one of leading youth mortality causes in the years to come. If we love our children, we must be open minded to debate this.
By André from Alentejo on 03 Oct 2023, 14:10
I'm against any changes that make life easier for people abusing drugs. People wouldn't be harmed by drugs if they didn't abuse them, that's why they're illegal.
By Billy Bissett from Porto on 03 Oct 2023, 17:02
I agree with @André completely.
Drugs are not a quick answer picture.
Through a set of circumstances, anyone can find themselves 'using' - this does not equal a Criminal.
The new law is facing reality.
Legalising anything brings 'quality standards' - Fentanyl is a disgusting drug, but it gets even more disgusting when idiots produce and supply it.
If the drug you are looking for is authentic and available, the chances of buying something harder are decreased. So are the chances of fatally overdosing.
Drug use does not indicate Race, Class, Financial position or state of Mental Health.
By Joe from Alentejo on 04 Oct 2023, 20:55