Pubdate: Wed, 27 Feb 2002 Source: Australian Associated Press (Australia Wire) Copyright: 2002 Australian Associated Press Author: Maria Hawthorne and Judy Skatssoon Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Safe Injecting Rooms) UN DRUGS BODY WANTS NSW INJECTING ROOMS CLOSED LONDON - Sydney's heroin injecting room is in breach of international drug conventions and must be closed down, the world anti-drugs body says. In its 2001 annual report the International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) condemned the opening of the medically-supervised Kings Cross facility and called on the federal government to bring its states into line. The injecting room - and the governments which allowed it to open - condoned illicit drug taking and drug trafficking, the board said. The board, a quasi-judicial body set up to enforce the 1961 United Nations convention on drugs, said the room's potential for harm reduction to addicts was outweighed by its potential to damage the anti-drugs fight. INCB president Hamid Ghodse said the board had gone public because its behind-the-scenes diplomatic efforts had failed to convince NSW authorities to close the room. "We have definitely exhausted quiet diplomacy," Prof Ghodse told AAP. "The board considers injecting rooms, wherever they are, to be in violation of the conventions. If the government provides the outlet for illicit drug trafficking, that's exactly the opposite of what the convention asks them to do - to stop the illicit drug." Prof Ghodse said it would be a different matter if the rooms were only used by people administering heroin or other drugs which had been prescribed for them. But he said that did not mean the INCB supported a heroin trial. "I didn't say that," he said. "The injecting room is not only for heroin. The injecting room is basically where you can use your ecstasy, you can use your injecting amphetamines, you can inject cocaine. An injecting room is a venue to come to use your drugs." The injecting room opened after intense debate on May 6 last year, a product of the state's 1999 Drug Summit. Supporters argue it is saving lives and providing referrals to help addicts get off drugs. The centre was currently used by an average 120 injecting drug users a day, its medical director Ingrid van Beek said. More than 800 clients had been referred to counsellors and other medical services and more than 100 overdoses had been successfully treated. There had been no fatalities at the centre. Dr van Beek declined to comment specifically on the INCB report. A spokesman for NSW Special Minister of State John Della Bosca said Mr Della Bosca addressed the INCB in Geneva last January and presented a paper outlining the centre's trial period. "He explained ... the various signs which came out of the six months report which were almost entirely good and that there were none of the problems that many had feared," the spokesman said. - --- MAP posted-by: Alex