Pubdate: Wed, 21 May 2008
Source: Globe and Mail (Canada)
Copyright: 2008, The Globe and Mail Company
Contact:  http://www.globeandmail.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168
Author: Gloria Galloway
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/insite (Insite)

RETIRED OFFICERS HEAD TO OTTAWA TO FIGHT FOR INSITE

OTTAWA -- The organizers of Vancouver's safe-injection site took 
retired policemen from Australia and Britain - as well as a retired 
Vancouver officer - to Ottawa yesterday to plead for an extension of 
the site's licence. With the June 30 expiry looming, Insite is trying 
to drum up support for its continued existence as a place in 
Vancouver's Downtown Eastside where addicts can inject their own 
illegal drugs in clean, supervised conditions.

The three retired policemen told reporters that closing the site 
would mean more deaths among the most vulnerable members of society - 
the poor and the uneducated - and would cost the criminal-justice 
system untold dollars if police were left to deal with overdoses.

"I have travelled halfway around the world to ask the Canadian 
government to allow the Vancouver safe-injection site, Insite, to 
keep operating," said retired officer Christopher Payne, formerly a 
detective sergeant with the Australian federal police in Sydney.

"Shutting down centres that do such good work would, I suggest, be 
just another heartless decision in what seems to be an endless war on 
drugs. It would be just another kick in the guts for people who need 
the most help, the addicts."

Tom Lloyd, a retired chief constable from Cambridge in England, said: 
"Put quite simply, if it's kept open, lives will be saved. If it's 
shut, people will be condemned to certain death."

But federal Health Minister Tony Clement, who has yet to make a 
decision on the site's future, fought back.

Before the news conference had ended, his office gave reporters 
contact information for Canadian police officers who oppose 
continuation of the site.

One of them was Superintendent Ron Taverner of the Toronto Police 
Service. He called Insite's operations a de facto legalization of street drugs.

Supt. Taverner said he would prefer to see funds directed to 
treatment programs because there is only so much government money to go around.

He is also concerned that crime around the site could increase, 
although studies have not supported that conclusion.

Mr. Clement has said he is keeping an open mind. When asked yesterday 
why his office would then provide rebuttals to arguments in favour of 
Insite, his spokeswoman said it is important that reporters have 
access to both sides of the debate.

"Illicit drugs take a terrible toll on human health," Laryssa Waler 
said in an e-mail, "which is why they were made illegal in the first 
place, and evidently, our Canadian police support keeping them illegal."

But some, such as the Vancouver Police Department, have endorsed the 
safe-injection site.

And Libby Davies, the New Democratic Party MP from Vancouver East, 
said it is inappropriate for Mr. Clement to provide counterarguments 
to the extension of the site's licence while saying he has yet to decide.

Ms. Davies accused the Health Minister of playing games with those 
who are working to keep the site open, and urged him to announce his 
decision immediately.

The police officers at the morning news conference, meanwhile, 
offered a passionate defence of the facility and strongly urged the 
elimination of laws prohibiting drugs such as heroin.

"We know that somewhere between 70 per cent and 90 per cent of all 
property crimes are committed by drug addicts to fund those 
addictions. We know that while drugs remain illegal, criminal gangs 
and organizations will continue to reap enormous amounts of money and 
they will defend their territories, killing anyone attempting to move 
in," said Tony Smith, a retired Vancouver police officer.

By handing over the drug distribution system to criminals, the 
government has ensured that the illegal substances are available to 
everyone, right down to primary-school children, he added.

Meanwhile, he said, addicts need help.

"Insite is the first and only Canadian site to realistically aid 
these individuals without condemning them.

"It's prevented hundreds of overdose deaths. It's provided medical 
assistance to those in need of it and it has assisted those who wish 
to get clean, to get drugs out of their lives."
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