Pubdate: Sat, 26 Aug 2000 Source: Bangkok Post (Thailand) Copyright: The Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd. 2000 Contact: http://www.bangkokpost.co.th/ Author: Steve Pedrotta CRIMINALISING THE DRUG HAS FAILED The editorial condemning the regulated provision of heroin to addicts in Sydney is big on criticism but short on constructive alternatives. The undeniable fact is that nothing anywhere, at any time, was ever stopped by making it illegal. Australia does not share the same myopia which allows Thai politicians to declare prostitution non-existent simply because it is illegal. Heroin and heroin addicts exist despite the drug being prohibited for decades. It can't be made any more illegal than it already is, but heroin continues to be readily available. How then can a prohibition policy demonstrated to be a failure be continued indefinitely? So what to do? Continue with the same policy regardless? Maybe it will work next week, next year or next century. Maybe all the addicts will die and then there won't be any dealers or any problem. But the truth is that while there is still a supply of heroin there will always be new addicts. Some of these addicts are the sons and daughters of loving parents who are fed up with the current policy of wishful thinking as a solution. For the sake of a clean needle or a regulated dose these people need not die. A government-sanctioned facility will provide both of these. Then at least addicts can live and attempt to become free of their addiction at some future time. If the government balks at providing safe heroin then perhaps the administration of lethal doses could be considered. By continuing with the current dismally ineffective solution, the government is condemning many addicts to death anyway. Why not do it properly and more humanely? But then again, the Australian federal government would rather see people die in agony and without dignity as evidenced by its recently demonstrated short-sighted response to euthanasia where local laws were overridden. Such compassion is reserved for dogs and cats instead. Prime Minister John Howard's government is a backward-looking government firmly seated in the 1950s and bereft of any touch with 21st century society. What's needed is new ideas and the willingness to try them without the fear of failure. We have already failed. Regulated and supervised injection of heroin may not reduce the number of addicts but it will reduce the number of deaths. New South Wales should be congratulated for taking what is a politically risky initiative. Let's hope euthanasia is next. Steve Pedrotta - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck