Pubdate: Sat, 24 Jun 2000 Source: Irish Examiner (Ireland) Copyright: Examiner Publications Ltd, 2000 Contact: http://www.examiner.ie/ Section: Opinion Author: Ryle Dwyer TIME TO FACE THE FACT THAT WE ARE STILL LOSING THE DRUGS WAR NEXT Monday will mark the fourth anniversary of the murder of Veronica Guerin. She was honoured in Boston last week by the Vienna based International Press Institute, and this prompted an extensive profile in the Boston Globe on Sunday. Before her murder ``organised crime was all but ignored and gangland leaders operated with relative impunity'', the Globe noted. Despite the tightening of laws dealing with organised crime following her killing, the reporter noted that today ``Ireland is awash in drugs'' and organised crime ``has never been more profitable''. In the four years since her death, Veronica has already been the subject of a biography and a movie based on the latter years of her life - When the Sky Falls - was released in Ireland and Britain last week. No movie has yet been made on the life of any of our 10 Taoisigh, and some of them are still awaiting their first biographer. Emily O'Reilly's biography of Veronica Guerin was rather hostile. Even if Veronica ``saw herself as involved in a crusade against dangerous people, her journalism contributed nothing to their downfall'', according to the author, who was particularly critical of the almost reckless way in which Veronica door stepped dangerous criminals for interviews. Veronica Guerin essentially gambled with her own life in the belief that the criminals that she was investigating would not dare to kill her because public opinion would then demand action against them. If those criminals had any common sense, they would not have killed her, but they were as stupid as they were avaricious and arrogant. ``We know who killed her -- and he is untouchable,'' the Irish Independent declared in a front page editorial following the murder. Those sentiments were effectively echoed by Nora Owen, the Minister for Justice at the time. ``The sad awful reality is that these people feel that they can do this without any answerability on their part,'' she admitted. Of course, she promised that the gardai would get the resources they needed to solve this crime. Earlier that year, however, she had said the Garda Commissioner of the time had assured her that the gardai were satisfied that they had all the necessary resources to respond to crime. If he really said that, I wrote here at the time, he is as out of his depth, as she is for repeating such nonsense. After Veronica's murder that government suddenly produced a reform package to tackle organised crime. Were the garda authorities really so out of touch they did not recognise the need for those powers until the Guerin murder, or was it that it took the sense of public outrage to make them face up to their responsibilities? The Criminal Assets Bureau (CAB) was established and it quickly arrested the gunman who killed Veronica and the motorcyclist who was driving him. Both have been convicted and jailed. The man suspected of ordering the murder has also been arrested and is awaiting trial. Many of the known drug barons suddenly fled to the Continent, and the CAB has seized more than pounds 20 million of their ill gotten gains. At least they are no longer parading around here publicly, flaunting their wealth and acting as role models for impressionable young people. But now, four years on, one must ask if the crime scene is really any better. There have certainly been plenty of hyped drug busts which might lead one to believe that the gardai are getting to grips with the problem. In his Boston Globe article on Sunday, however, Kevin Cullen concluded that things have actually got worse since Veronica's murder. ``The number of heroin addicts in Dublin has nearly doubled to about 13,000, health officials say,'' Cullen wrote. ``Drug pushers have slashed the price of heroin and junkies can get a fix for about $5, the cheapest in Europe.'' He added that ``junkies walk the streets aimlessly or lounge bleary eyed in city parks and public places. One day last week, a couple of addicts lay passed out, in an unconscious embrace, on a bench outside the Financial Services Centre at the mouth of the River Liffey, a temple to Ireland's booming economy''. Isn't that a great advert for this country? Come to Dublin for Europe's cheapest heroin! Won't it do wonders for our tourism? It might even attract a new type of tourist. Cheap drugs are not only a bonus for the addicts, but they also probably help keep the crime rate down, because addicts do not have to steal as much to purchase their fix. Of course, drugs are cheapest for those who are not addicted, while those who are already hooked have to pay inflated prices to feed their own habits. The cheaper the drugs, the more likely the pushers are to hand out free samples to children in hope of getting them addicted. This is really a modern form of slavery in which drugs are used to control young people so that they can be compelled to steal, sell drugs, or go into prostitution to feed their habits. With the number of drug addicts escalating in Dublin, the price of drugs should have gone up if the gardai were even holding their own in the so called war on drugs. But instead prices are down, which means that there is more heroin available than ever before. How long will it take people to face the inevitable conclusion that our current drug policies are a pathetic failure. The problem is getting worse and will inevitably deteriorate further still if we persist with the current policies which have failed everywhere. If there were prizes for stupidity, those who advocate following the example of the United States would surely sweep the boards. The Americans have failed dismally in their so called war on organised crime, and they have the worst drug problems of the developed world. Imitating them is a recipe for disaster. We should be learning from their mistakes, not seeking to emulate them. ``Our children are being killed on a weekly basis and nobody cares,'' one anti drug activist declared at a special showing of the film last week. ``If the government cared the way Veronica Guerin cared, we wouldn't be having the deaths we're having.'' What will it take to get politicians to face up to the reality that they are losing the drug war - Sinn Fein to secure balance of power? This country is mired in political corruption, yet nobody seemed to expect the gardai to investigate the bribery and corruption of politicians. Instead a fortune is being spent on judicial tribunals. What does this say about public confidence in our police force? In trying to avoid political involvement, the garda authorities have actually been ensnared in the worst kind of politics - they have appeared to funk the investigation crimes committed by politicians. As a result the investigation has been turned over to lawyers, who are not trained investigators. And people wonder why we are in such a mess! - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart