Pubdate: Fri, 02 Mar 2001 Source: Ha'aretz (Israel) Copyright: 2001sHa'aretz Daily Newspaper Ltd. Contact: 21 Schocken St., P.O.B 233, Tel-Aviv 61001, Israel Fax: 03-5121156 Website: http://www3.haaretz.co.il/eng/ THE BATTLE AGAINST ECSTASY In recent days the police raided a number of clubs throughout the country where, according to detectives, the drug ecstasy is sold and used. The police stepped up their activities following the death of at least four young people in recent months as a result of using the drug. Despite the angry responses of the club owners, the police operations are appropriate. The damage caused, especially to young people, justifies the special attention given to the problem by the law enforcement authorities. The fight against the consumption of illegal drugs runs into difficulties throughout the world. U.S. authorities have recently expressed concern that the massive effort to combat drug use there, involving enormous budget and manpower allocations, is threatened with failure. In Israel also, the argument is heard that the struggle against drug use is complicated; the promise of an exceptional experience inherent in the use of drugs makes their appeal particularly difficult to combat. The advocates of ecstasy present as supporting evidence the relatively small number of victims of the drug. The owners of the clubs raided by the police argue that they cannot prevent the trade of ecstasy in their establishments or in the environs. The owners accuse the police of threatening that if they do not help in the battle against the drug, legal pressures will be brought to bear via minor violations to which the police normally choose to turn a blind eye. These arguments are not sufficiently significant to deflect from the need to prevent, to the greatest extent possible, the use of the dangerous drug. The substance used in the drug was first introduced at the turn of the past century as a psychiatric drug, and is still used today for psychiatric treatment. However, this form of use is controlled. Unsupervised use of ecstasy, which is produced without any controls, exposes young people to effects many of them are unable to deal with. There is no room for a so-called liberal approach that calls for the freedom of choice and of the benefits in a pill of ecstasy. The attitude to ecstasy in this country must take into account its impact on its consumers, which could be very severe. On the basis of this assumption, the police are right to act forcefully, even if the results of their activities are only partially effective. An important component of the battle against drugs, albeit restricted in its effectiveness, is an intensive public relations campaign. The prevention of the spread of the drug use is a task which the schools must also undertake with determination. One should not tolerate a situation in which, according to many witnesses, the schools have become fertile ground for drug trafficking. School administrators cannot wash their hands of the problem, the way the club owners seem to be doing; the school officials must undertake severe measures. Parents do not send their children to clubs, but they do send them to school in the belief that the institution is capable of keeping delinquency outside its gates. Ecstasy has developed great appeal in recent years. The justification for combating it, articulated this week by the police commander of Tel Aviv's Yarkon District, overrides all other arguments in favor of the drug. "I do not want to find a body in a parking lot and find out that this young person died after having taken an ecstasy pill at a club," said commander Uri Bar-Lev. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh Sutcliffe