In 2001, Portugal became the first country to decriminalize the consumption of all drugs, shifting its focus from punishing users to reducing the harms.
Seventeen years later, two harm reduction workers who drive around the capital Lisbon assisting addicts say they measure their success in small victories.
This is Part Two of a two-part series on Portugalâs decriminalization of all drugs. Click here for Part One.
Psychologists Rita and Ines pack a van each day and drive to back alleys and other places where people shoot up, offering them clean needles, counselling and bottled water.
Caesar Moreno is addicted to heroin and cocaine. Heâs never had addiction treatment, although he also admits that he has never asked for it.
Rita and Ines are not there to judge. âIf people ingest with a clean syringe, for us itâs a good day,â says Ines.
Moreno appreciates Portugalâs approach to addiction, which â while still sending dealers to jail â treats users as people with a health issue.
âIâm not a criminal,â Moreno says.
âI just take drugs only, nothing else. Iâm a good person.â
The workers are also there to help people like Mario, a Romanian who has relied on them for water and to bring him to hospital when he gets ill.
âI started injecting a couple months ago,â he told ŰÎŰ´ŤĂ˝. âBut I donât really know how to do it.â
One of the addicts living under a bridge has tuberculosis. Rita and Ines say theyâre working to prevent the disease from spreading.
âWe are trying to get them to all go for an X-ray,â says Ines.
That seems more possible than before decriminalization, because drug users donât need to fear arrest.
Meanwhile, have dropped among drug users since the policy change, according to the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction.
The NDP believes Canada should follow Portugalâs example and decriminalize all drugs. The Liberals and Conservatives do not support the approach.
With a report from CTV London Bureau Chief Paul Workman in Lisbon, Portugal