Source: Canberra Times (Australia) Website: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/ Contact: Fri, 22 Jan 1999 Author: Peter Watney WIDE PUBLIC DEBATE SEEMS USELESS SHARPE'S tragically accurate picture of "The unsafe injecting room..." (CT, 18 January, p.8) shows starkly the message our present illicit-drug policies send to our children. Decades ago our Federal Government gave in to American pressure and prohibited certain drugs. It did this without any public discussion, and without any criteria set that might show whether this radical change in methods of control would provide the benefits claimed for it. A few months ago Amanda Vanstone boasted that the capture of 400kg of heroin would decrease the supplies to users and increase the cost. It has done neither. It has made no perceptible difference at all. Four years ago we had a costly and wide-ranging public discussion of a plan for safe injecting rooms, counselling, and the supply of clinical-quality heroin to registered local dependent users of heroin. It was called "The Heroin Trial". Two years ago there was broad public acceptance, Legislative Assembly agreement, Ministerial Council and Federal Cabinet approval, and Mr Howard stepped in and vetoed the supply of clinical-quality heroin. What is the use of wide-ranging and costly public debate if one politician can sweep it all aside on the specious grounds of the "message it might send to our children"? The deaths, the emergencies, the infections continued to escalate. Isn't it time that our politicians take a little courage into their hands, show a little leadership, and try just one little measure that has produced dramatic results elsewhere, without having to wait another however many months and for however many dollars worth of public discussion going over the same ground covered in 1995? PETER WATNEY Holt - --- MAP posted-by: Joel W. Johnson