Pubdate: Tue, 25 Mar 2003 Source: West Australian (Australia) Copyright: 2003 West Australian Newspapers Limited Contact: http://www.thewest.com.au Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/495 Author: Daniel Clery Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) ADDICTS OPT FOR HEROIN SUBSTITUTES Tight Supply Pushes Users To Opiates, Ecstasy, Says Report AUSTRALIA'S deepening heroin drought coincides with an increase in clandestine amphetamine production and abuse of prescription drugs, according to the latest Australian Crime Commission report on illicit drugs. The 2001-02 report released yeterday said a 56 per cent decrease in heroin-related arrests, as well as a steady fall in the amount of heroin being seized in Australia, demonstrated a depressed supply of the drug across the country. Almost 420kg of heroin was intercepted by Customs officers last financial year, with 378kg seized in a single operation in Brisbane. The scarcity of heroin had seen increasing numbers of drug users supplement their intake with prescription drugs, usually by persuading doctors to prescribe them opiates or depressants for a range of fake illnesses. The report said that almost 60 per cent of injecting drug users had used depressants recently to supplement their drug use, with 23 per cent using pharmaceutical opiates and 18 per cent using morphine. "The line between drug of choice and drug of availability is becoming increasingly indistinct," the report said. In contrast, increased use and potency of amphetamines was reported by police and health agencies across Australia in 2001-02. Two hundred and forty clandestine amphetamine production labs were discovered in 2001-02 - a fourfold increase on 1996-97 and up 19 per cent on the previous year. Nearly 140 of these - including Australia's first crystalline methyl-amphetamine laboratory - were in Queensland, while 29 were found in WA. The report also said that tighter restrictions on the sale of chemicals needed for amphetamine production were driving drug manufacturers to more desperate measures, including stealing from pharmaceutical companies and importing pseudoephedrines from overseas. There also had been an increase in the number of mobile labs found in shops, self-storage units and hotel rooms, which were used as a short-term base to manufacture and distrubute the drug. The report identified the synthetic party drug GHB - or liquid ecstasy - as a likely growth area for drug suppliers because it was easy to produce and the base chemicals were readily available. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom