Pubdate: Mon, 26 May 2003 Source: Peak, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 Peak Publications Society Contact: http://www.peak.sfu.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/775 Author: Lucas Van Meer Mass Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Vancouver (Vancouver) http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Safe Injecting Rooms) PROTESTERS DEMAND END TO POLICE CRACKDOWN Less than 100 people gathered in Victory Square a week ago to protest the recent addition of 41 police officers to Vancouver's Downtown Eastside and what they called the failure of civic and federal governments to establish a safe injection site. The crowd, consisting mostly of Downtown Eastside residents, activists and drug users, marched through the neighbourhood to the corner of Main and Hastings where they held a moment of silence for the victims of the drug problem. A number of people told the crowd personal stories of how drugs and bureaucratic solutions to the drug problem have affected their lives. The protest was organised by the Anti-Poverty Committee along with a number of other Downtown Eastside activist groups involved with the Coalition for Harm Reduction. Few media outlets were present and the police maintained a low profile. Ann Livingston, project manager for the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users, attended the protest and said the recent police crackdown has had a number of negative health and social impacts. Many drug users, who she said are only able to support their addictions by steering other users to dealers or keeping a lookout for the police in exchange for drugs, are being charged with possession for the purposes of trafficking. "The police say they're dealers, but I say they're drug addicted people involved in the drug trade," Livingston said. She noted that in the drug trade "the highest risks are taken by the poorest and most disenfranchised." Eventually, Livingston claimed, these people would be back on the streets with warrants for their arrest for failure to appear in court - criminalised although they are victims. Livingston said the police crackdown has caused people to scatter. "I don't think an open drug market is a good thing," she said, adding that fear of arrest has led to drug users injecting in more dangerous areas and being less willing to access health services. Protester Megan Oleson, a registered nurse, has been volunteering from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. every night at the illegal volunteer and user run safe injection site at 327 Carrall Street. "The police," Oleson said, "have had a car parked outside the site and have been harassing people as they come in." She continued regardless of this and the site has received an average of 100 visitors a night since it was opened a month ago. Vancouver Police Constable Sarah Bloor claimed to have no knowledge of any police contact with the safe injection site, and said she considers it a city licensing and health authority issue. Community reaction to increased law enforcement has been good, she said. "There are a few political groups with their own agendas, but otherwise the response has been overwhelmingly positive," Bloor said. "Our hope is that we can restore a sense of community to the neighbourhood." Other police officers on duty at the time of the protest expressed similar feelings and said that public reaction had been nothing but positive. Speakers at the protest, such as Oleson and David Cunningham from the Anti-Poverty Committee, talked about the operation of the unauthorised safe injection site. "The site is a way of forcing the issue," Oleson said. "We have taken the most action out of any level of government." Livingston said that the various levels of government now realise that safe injection sites will proceed regardless of government participation. Vancouver city council is currently attempting to secure funding for their planned safe injection site from the federal government. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake