Pubdate: Fri, 25 Feb 2000 Source: Australian, The (Australia) Copyright: News Limited 2000 Contact: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/ Author: Sian Powell And Benjamin Haslem PM BOWS TO STATES ON DRUGS Australia moved closer to its first safe drugs injecting room when John Howard backed down yesterday on his opposition to the scheme and the Uniting Church prepared to announce the site for its planned operation in Sydney's Kings Cross. The Prime Minister ruled out federal intervention to scuttle the planned heroin injecting rooms in NSW, Victoria and the ACT, saying he did not believe the commonwealth had the right to interfere in what was ultimately a decision for the states. Under mounting pressure to intervene in West Australian and Northern Territory mandatory sentencing laws, Mr Howard conceded that states' rights were paramount in the injecting rooms issue and said he would allow the NSW, Victorian and ACT governments to push ahead with their plans. "I don't . . . agree with heroin injecting rooms but I do accept that ultimately that is something that is going to be decided by the states," he told Perth radio. "If states decide to go ahead with it, unless their going ahead with it is in direct breach of a federal law - and I am not aware at this stage that it would be - then it's not really the sort of thing that you intervene in," he said. Mr Howard last December called on the three governments to abandon plans for injecting rooms and sought legal advice on how the federal Government could use a UN treaty to invoke its external powers to scuttle the plans. The Uniting Church will announce today that it has signed a lease on a disused pinball parlour in Kings Cross to set up what will probably be Australia's first injecting room. The Kings Cross premises is likely to be operational by the middle of the year, possibly pipping similar facilities already in the pipeline in Canberra and Melbourne. In the ACT, a 17-member committee has been appointed to investigate ways and means of implementing safe injecting rooms legislation. Many in government circles expect an injecting centre to be operational by mid-year. In Melbourne, the Wesley Mission has an inner-city injecting room almost ready. The Bracks Government has asked a committee to report on the issue by the end of March and it seems likely the Government will then ask the mission to take on at least one of five proposed centres. Mr Howard's comments were prompted by a UN control board report, released on Wednesday night, that says explicit or tacit approval of drug injection rooms is a step in the direction of drug legalisation. "By permitting injection rooms, a government could be considered to be in contravention of the international drug control conventions," it says. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea