UNIS/NAR/1483
14 March 2024
VIENNA, 14 March (UN Information Service) – The Commission on Narcotic Drugs (CND), the UN’s main policy-making body on drugs, opens today in Vienna to review progress made in addressing the world drug problem and how to accelerate implementation of international commitments.
This year’s session of the Commission begins with a special segment attended by a number of high-level officials and heads of UN bodies, as the CND marks the mid-point to achieving the commitments set out in the Ministerial Declaration adopted by the Commission in 2019.
The 67th session of the CND convenes amidst the emergence of highly agile drug trafficking networks, a record-high supply of certain drugs, and a significant treatment gap, wherein only one in five individuals with a drug use disorder receives adequate care.
“Drug challenges are evolving swiftly, as synthetics change the market, trafficking networks evolve their business model, and illicit markets overlap with conflict and instability,” said Ghada Waly, Executive Director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). “The global response is at an important juncture, and the Commission on Narcotic Drugs must use this milestone session to unite around balanced responses that safeguard our communities, promote public health, and uphold human rights.”
For the first time, Member States will be making new pledges on the challenges identified in the 2019 Ministerial Declaration, which will aim to turn the policy commitments into action on the ground. Launched by the Chair of the CND, Ambassador Philbert Johnson of Ghana, the Pledge4Action allows Member States to publicly declare their readiness to invest efforts, expertise, and resources into implementing their global drug policy commitments.
“Amidst the complexities of the global landscape, failure to unite in our efforts is not an option,” said Ambassador Johnson. “This mid-term review underscores the necessity of collaborative diplomacy to accelerate our actions to address the world drug problem. Together, through steadfast diplomacy and unified action, we will advance.”
Resolutions under consideration by the Commission address topics related to rehabilitation and recovery management programmes; improving the access and availability of controlled substances for medical and scientific purposes; preventing and responding to drug overdoses; and alternative development.
The 67th session will run until 22 March.
* *** *
For further information, please contact:
UNODC Press
Email: unodc-press[at]un.org
Watch live on UN Web TV
We must transform how we produce and consume, and how we value nature, says the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, "Biodiversity is the bedrock of life and a cornerstone of sustainable development.... Biodiversity loss is a global challenge. No one country, however rich or powerful, can address it alone. Nor can they live without the rich biodiversity that defines our planet."
LGBTIQ+ people around the world face an onslaught of hate speech, attacks, and restrictions on their rights. The power of communities is the theme this year which reminds us that we are strongest together. "LGBTIQ+ people, and those working with them to secure their rights, have proved time and again the value of communities in providing support and driving change," says UN Secretary-General António Guterres
"From the telegraph to radio, from the Internet to Artificial Intelligence, technology has transformed how we live, work, and connect." — António Guterres
Barbados signed and deposited its instrument of ratification for the United Nations Convention on the International Effects of Judicial Sales of Ships (the “Beijing Convention on the Judicial Sale of Ships”) at the United Nations Headquarters in New York on 8 May 2025.