Pubdate: Fri, 21 Apr 2000 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 2000 David Syme & Co Ltd Contact: 250 Spencer Street, Melbourne, 3000, Australia Website: http://www.theage.com.au/ Author: Phillip Hudson And Penny Fannin WRONG MESSAGE, SAYS PM Heroin injecting rooms in Victoria would send the wrong message to the world that Australia supported drug use rather than rehabilitation and it would draw criminals into local communities, Prime Minister John Howard said yesterday. Mr Howard blasted the state's plan to set up five supervised injecting rooms in the city and suburbs and said there was "no clear evidence" from overseas that they reduced the drug problem or saved lives. Declaring that Victoria would get "no help of any kind" from the Federal Government for the injecting rooms, Mr Howard urged local communities and the Victorian Liberal Party to use any veto power at their disposal. But State Opposition Leader Denis Napthine said Victorian Liberals - who could use their majority in the upper house to block the plan - would decide independently about whether to support the trial. He said the party needed to consult with the councils and community, and see the proposed legislation, before deciding whether to support or reject such a "radical social experiment". He said: "We in the Liberal Party certainly will respect the views of the Prime Minister but we will fundamentally make up our mind on the basis of what we think is in the best interests of the situation here in Victoria." A prominent reform advocate accused Mr Howard of closing his mind to overseas evidence on injecting rooms. Dr Alex Wodack, president of the Australian Drug Law Reform Foundation, said the most persuasive statistic was that there had not been a single fatal overdose in a supervised injecting room in almost 15 years. Dr Wodack said harm-minimisation measures, including supervised injecting rooms, were no longer controversial in Europe, but accepted. "It seems this is only controversial in Kirribilli," he said. Mr Howard, speaking on radio 3AW, said he did not support the injecting rooms because "they give a degree of acceptability" to drug use. "They create local difficulties as far as the location of them are concerned. "They have the potential to attract criminal elements to areas where they do not now go," he told radio 3AW. "Overall, I think they say to the world well we've given up on trying to persuade people not to start taking drugs." Mr Howard stepped up pressure on the states to spend more on rehabilitation and cracking down on drug dealers. He last year announced a $110 million tough on drugs diversionary program. Victoria stands to receive $23 million over four years. But the money has not been delivered because the State Government has not yet signed an agreement with the Federal Government. The agreement requires the state to guarantee that police and the courts will have the power to divert minor drug offenders into education and rehabilitation programs. Police would also have formal power to direct people in possession of drugs away from the courts and into compulsory assessment for treatment or an education course to overcome their drug problem. "I think the states have dropped the ball in the past on those programs, but we're putting a lot more money into them and we hope that they increase their allocations as well," he said. Mr Howard said it was a mistake to send a signal of acceptability and harm minimisation rather than deterrence, abstinence in the first place and rehabilitation. "I don't hear anybody making an eloquent, articulate case that on the basis of demonstrated success around the world, this has worked," he said. He said World Health Organisation studies were mixed and in some cases critical. Mr Howard compared his hard line stand with the anti-smoking campaign, saying incentives, programs and encouragement gradually changed attitudes. Victoria's Premier, Steve Bracks, said the state Liberals had been briefed on the government's drug strategy by Professor David Penington and had initiated investigations into the drug problem while still in government. "I think the Liberals here in Victoria will make up their own mind in their own time," Mr Bracks said. "I would expect that they would act not in a partisan political way because the Prime Minister wants them but in the interests of Victoria and in the interests of harm minimisation and saving lives." Mr Bracks said his government was aware of Mr Howard's stance on injecting rooms before it adopted the drug advisory committee's recommendation to set up drug injecting facilities. But, he said, supervised injecting rooms were important as part of a wider drug strategy in Victoria aimed at helping people who were suffering the effects of heroin addiction. "This is all about saving lives. What is happening now is not working in Victoria, we have more than 80 deaths from heroin already this year and it is escalating... we must do something different." Mr Bracks said the government had a four-part strategy that encompassed prevention, policing, rehabilitation and saving lives which would minimise harm to drug users and the wider community. Victoria's supervised injecting facilities will only go ahead if they are approved by the local councils - Greater Dandenong, Yarra, Port Phillip, Maribyrnong, and Melbourne - in which they will be located. So far, only the cities of Yarra and Port Phillip have publicly supported the trial. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea