Pubdate: Wed, 01 Mar 2006 Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Copyright: 2006 The Sydney Morning Herald Contact: http://www.smh.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/441 GOVT AID 'ESSENTIAL' IN WAR ON DRUGS Winning the global war on drugs means increasing the levels of international aid to developing countries, an Australian expert says. The latest annual report from the United Nations International Narcotics Control Board into the global state on drugs says alternative development programs, which aim to protect and assist subsistence farmers who are vulnerable to drug gangs, have been extremely successful in stemming the cultivation of drugs such as opium and cocaine. "For us to ask a subsistence farmer, whether he's growing opium in Afghanistan or coca leaf in Bolivia or Colombia, to stop growing it, he's not likely to do so if it means his family isn't going to be properly clothed and fed," said INCB member Major Brian Watters. "If it comes to the test between that and between not contributing to a problem in the rich western world, then I'm sure there's no issue for him." "If the western world really wants to see a reduction in these products then they have to bite the bullet economically speaking and provide the resources to enable these people to live a reasonable life with reasonable earnings from jobs that are acceptable." Oceania, which encompasses Australia and New Zealand, is emerging as a transit area for the amphetamine "ice", with a substantial increase in reported seizures of the drug, the report says. Use of the drug is on the rise, as it has replaced heroin for some users in the face of a heroin "drought". Significant inroads have been made into the cocaine problem, although New Zealand seems to be a target of South American syndicates wanting to ship the drug into Australia and the United States, the report says. Maj Watters, a former head of the Australian National Council on Drugs, said there had been a decrease in the use of every drug except amphetamines, which appeared to be having its heyday. A surge in internet pharmacies was one of the major problems confronting authorities in the drug crackdown, he said. There are 2.5 million inappropriate prescriptions issued every month online in the United States alone. "Some (pharmacies) are actually, on the international level, owned by drug syndicates and some of the drugs they are sending are actually legal pharmaceuticals that can only be supplied on prescription," Maj Watters said. "In a broad sense we know that this is a worldwide phenomena and we believe that it's happening in Australia as well." Clandestine amphetamine manufacturers are also operating scores of smaller laboratories instead of larger set-ups and are importing legitimate industrial chemicals from China. "It is impossible to assess which of these chemicals, many of which are used in paints and plastics, are being brought in for legitimate purposes," he said. The report also expressed concern that of 15 Oceania states, only Australia, Fiji, Micronesia, New Zealand and Tonga are party to all three international drug control treaties. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman