The Eastern and Central European and Central Asian Commission on Drug Policy (ECECACD) was established by a group of high-level leaders, including former Heads of State, politicians, scientists, diplomats and philanthropists from the region on November 11, 2021.

The Regional Commission is an independent body chaired by Aleksander Kwaśniewski, former President of Poland and member of the Global Commission on Drug Policy.

The ECECACD is inspired by the Global Commission on Drug Policy, and works in close collaboration with it.  The ECECACD aims to inspire an open debate, and promote evidence-based drug policy approaches across the region.  The Commission will focus on the specific needs and issues for the Eastern Europe and Central Asia region.

The Commissioners are regional leaders from different professional arenas, and have come together through an awareness of the failure of the current drug control regime – and the urgent need to advocate for drug policies based on scientific evidence, human rights, public health and security.

The ECECACD features the following Commissioners: Aleksander Kwaśniewski, Former President of Poland (Chair); Michel Kazatchkine, Former Executive Director of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, Switzerland; Pavel Bém, Ex-Mayor of Prague, the Czech Republic; Vytenis Andriukaitis, WHO Special Envoy for Europe, Lithuania; Elvira Surabaldiyeva, former Deputy Prime Minister Kyrgyzstan, Kyrgyzstan; Andris Piebalgs, Adviser to the President of Latvia and former European Commissioner for Energy (Barroso I) and former European Commissioner for Development (Barroso II), Latvia; and Elena Pinchuk, Founder, Elena Pinchuk AIDS Foundation, Ukraine

The ECECACD has developed three background reports: 1) production, trafficking and consumption of illicit drugs in the EECA region; 2) drug laws and policies in four regions of Eurasia; and 3) perception of drugs in Central and Eastern Europe and Central Asia: overhaul needed.

These reports provide comprehensive information about current patterns of drug production, trafficking and consumption in the region, about prevailing drug policy approaches in the region and their consequences, and on public narratives on drugs and drug use in the region.  The reports also contain recommendations on each of the respective issues, which can be implemented by governments in the region.

In its work, the ECECACD reportedly builds on, and will collaborate with, other similar groups including the Global Commission on Drug Policy and the West Africa Commission on Drugs.  The ECECACD also works in partnership with a wide network of experts and partners in the region.

The ECECACD is supported by a Secretariat that provides administrative and technical support.