Pubdate: Sun, 22 Apr 2007 Source: Courier-Mail, The (Australia) Contact: http://thecouriermail.com.au/extras/forms/letter.htm Copyright: 2007 Queensland Newspapers Website: http://www.thecouriermail.news.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/98 Author: Glenn Milne Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) SQUAD FIGHTS ICE THE Federal Government is to establish an international "flying squad" of elite police to target production of the killer drug crystal methamphetamine, or "ice". The new Australian Federal Police squad will be announced by Prime Minister John Howard today as part of an additional $150 million over four years to boost the Government's "tough on drugs" strategy. There will also be extra funds to buy state-of-the-art drug detection equipment for the Customs Service. As well as other drugs, this equipment will detect both the importation of ice and its components, such as pseudoephedrine. Some of the largest ice factories supplying Australia are in South-East Asian countries such as Indonesia. The new international AFP squad, to be known as the Regional Deployment Team, will aim to intercept the drug before it reaches Australia. The team will operate via an international liaison officer network, and travel to regional sites of drug production if the case requires. The package to be announced by Mr Howard will also include money for the Australian Crime Commission aimed at improving its technical communications interception capabilities. The strategy will involve three main planks - rehabilitation, education and greater law enforcement. It adds to the $1.3 billion the Government has already spent on the drug strategy first unveiled in 1997. In that period, the number of Australian illicit drug users fell from 22 per cent to 15 per cent, cannabis users dropped from 18 per cent to 11 per cent, and heroin deaths from 1100 a year a decade ago to 374 in 2005. Police have also seized a total of 14 tonnes of illicit drugs over the decade. The announcement will build on independent research showing that in nine out of 10 families, parents and children are prepared to talk to each other about illegal drug use. The package will also feature a new edition of the free booklet Talking With Your Kids About Drugs. It will emphasise the dangers and warning signs of ice use. More resources will be made available to teachers to combat the use of methamphetamines, and to non-government organisations providing rehabilitation. It will recognise that the treatment of ice addicts often requires specialist skills, because chronic users can be psychotic and violent. An international study released two weeks ago showed Australia had the highest per-capita ice usage in the English-speaking world. Mr Howard's initiative follows an announcement by Opposition Leader Kevin Rudd last week that a Labor Government would ban the importation of ice implements and the sale of pseudoephedrine to minors. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek