Pubdate: Thu, 13 Jul 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: Mark Forbes VETS SEEK BAN ON STEROIDS EXPORTS Australian steroid exports were a national disgrace and should be banned, the Australian Veterinary Association said yesterday. It will demand tough action from a meeting of state and federal governments in Perth today. The Ministerial Council on Drugs Strategy is likely to consider controls on steroid exports, limits on steroid production and a taskforce to investigate steroid abuse. Last weekend The Age revealed that Australia was a leading supplier to the international steroid black market. Steroids destined for the illicit trade are being certified and endorsed by federal authorities. Victorian Police Minister Andre Haermeyer will today call for an investigation into the level of criminal involvement in the trafficking of performance and image-enhancing drugs and a taskforce, led by the Commonwealth, charged with cutting the illicit supply. The New South Wales Government will demand the Commonwealth introduce export controls on steroids. A spokesman for Health Minister Craig Knowles said there was grave concern at the lack of federal action on steroids. Australian Veterinary Association vice-president Garth McGilvray said the abject failure of the federal and state governments to do something tangible was damaging Australia's reputation as a crusader against the misuse of drugs in sport. "Perhaps our last chance to save face will be when the Ministerial Council on Drugs Strategy meets," he said. "The AVA urges all the governments represented there to finally do something meaningful to stop the flow of these drugs on to the world market." The council is made up of all Australian health, justice and police ministers. A separate meeting of police ministers is also likely to consider steroid issues. A report on performance-enhancing drugs from the National Expert Advisory Committee on Illicit Drugs, commissioned by the council last year, will be considered at today's meeting. The report recommends export controls on steroids and possible limits on production. A monitoring system to establish the extent of steroid use and harm associated with it is also advocated. The expert committee found increasing organised crime involvement in the trade and widespread diversion of Australian steroids on to the local and international black market. Australia is described in the report as the "veterinary anabolic steroid capital of the world". A NSW Government spokesman called for the public release of the committee's report and the implementation of its recommendations. "There is clearly a need for a major federal crackdown on the export of these drugs." Some areas of the Federal Government are believed to be supporting a campaign by the pharmaceutical industry against regulation of export steroids over concerns it could cut their profits, despite the evidence of black market diversion. The world's biggest buyer of Australian steroids, Mr Alberto Salthiel, told The Age that it "wasn't my problem" that his steroids were sold in bulk to American teenagers, as Mexican law allowed it. His company, Denkal, buys nearly 15 per cent of Australia's total steroid production from Sydney-based manufacturers. Dr McGilvray said three years of warnings to government had only produced "bureaucratic waffle". Steroid exports should be stopped outright, he said. - ---