Pubdate: Sun, 03 May 2015 Source: Sunday Telegraph, The (Australia) Copyright: 2015 News Limited Contact: http://www.sundaytelegraph.news.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/436 Author: Miranda Devine WE MUST SHOW SOME BALLS IN WAR ON DRUGS THE emotional circus surrounding the executions of Bali Nine drug masterminds Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran is wrong on so many levels. One lowlight was the grandstanding 11th hour intervention by a group of actors telling Tony Abbott to "show some balls". But nothing was as bad as the unscrupulous opportunism of the drug reform lobby. No sooner had the shots been fired on Nusakambangan Island than the drug liberalisers started capitalising on acute media-driven sympathy, declaring the executions were proof the "war on drugs" is futile. Chan and Sukumaran "have become the latest victims in the unwinnable war on drugs", declared Associate Professor David van Mill of the University of Western Australia. "The Australian war on drugs must stop today," wrote Matt Noffs, CEO of the Noffs Foundation. "Remember the faces of Chan and Sukumaran when you next hear that term 'the war on drugs'." What a joke. For starters, Chan and Sukumaran might have reformed, but a decade ago they were hard-core drug traffickers who had induced seven young Australians, average age 22, to smuggle 8.8kg of heroin from Bali. What's more, there is no "Australian war on drugs". Drug use has been effectively decriminalised. The Howardera policies that dramatically reduced drug use have fallen by the wayside. As a result, drugs are cheap and as plentiful as they have ever been. So eager are people to lay blame for the executions that we forget the context of the socalled "Bali Nine" arrests in 2005. Australia had been through a deadly heroin epidemic that had claimed thousands. In 1999, a staggering 1116 people were killed by heroin. Associated crime, especially rampant break and enters, was taking its toll. Under the influence of drug liberalisers, illicit use had leapt 29 per cent between 1995 and 1998, the largest increase in our history, according to the UN Office of Drugs and Crime. Australia had one of the biggest drug problems in the world, with 22 per cent of the population taking drugs at least once a year, five times the global average. We were heading over a cliff. When John Howard came to office he instituted a "Tough on Drugs Strategy", combining law enforcement, education, rehabilitation and harm reduction. It was a stunning success - for the first time in three decades drug use fell. Heroin deaths plummeted. Between 1998 and 2007 the use of cannabis halved, speed and ice fell 40 per cent and heroin plunged 75 per cent. The age of experimentation climbed and fewer teenagers used drugs. In 1996 almost one in five children aged 12 to 15 had used an illicit drug in the previous month. By 2008 that figure was down to one in 20. Customs X-rayed containers for drugs at the dockyards and the heroin seizure rate increased from 8.5 kilograms per million population in 1995 to 30.4kg in 2000, with major drug dealers jailed. The result was a heroin drought from the end of 2000 that was unique in the world. Under the able leadership of Commissioner Mick Keelty, the Australian Federal Police had expanded into the SouthEast Asian Golden Triangle, where much of our heroin originated, establishing links with police across the region, including in Indonesia. The regional co-operation on drugs soon extended to counter terrorism and people smuggling. After the 2002 Bali bombing, ties with Indonesian law enforcement grew stronger, underpinned by the friendship between Keelty and Bali's police chief, Made Pastika. Significantly, Australia had also signed the United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances. This treaty obliged us to cooperate with other countries on drug-law enforcement, so we traded information about trafficking operations with our neighbours. This is the context of the Bali Nine arrests in April 2005. Chan was a career criminal with the tattoos of Kings Cross gangster Danny Karam to prove it. He and Sukumaran had already run heroin smuggling operations. Their latest venture was worth $4 million. Yet, today's armchair critics claim the AFP has "blood on its hands" for tipping off the Indonesians. They ignore the death and misery that would have come from the 8kg of heroin the Bali Nine was trying to import. They forget the AFP was carrying out the will of the people. There was no guarantee the heroin would have been intercepted without the involvement of Indonesia. The emotional connection many Australians felt with those two men was to our credit. Having come to know them through the advocacy of artist Ben Quilty and blanket media coverage, it was impossible not to be moved by their apparent rehabilitation and feel horror at their deaths. But a belief in redemption does not erase the crime. Nor should it condemn us to repeat the mistakes of history. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom