Pubdate: Sat, 18 Jul 1998 Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Contact: http://www.smh.com.au/ Author: Greg Bearup HEROIN: OUR $1.6BN HABIT Australia's heroin epidemic appears to have peaked but the effects will be felt for years, with thefts to buy the drug estimated at up to $1.6 billion a year. This week the Australian Bureau of Statistics released figures revealing a surge in heroin-related crimes, especially armed robbery, which saw an additional 2,000 robberies in NSW alone. In a yet-to-be-released study obtained by the Herald, titled Running the Risks, four of Australia's leading drug researchers estimate that regular heroin users steal a total of between $500 million and $1.6 billion a year to support their habit. In interviews for the study in south-western Sydney, 202 heroin users reported earning $237,291 from crime in the previous week, an average of $1,175 each. The main author of the study, Dr Lisa Maher, said she believed that the epidemic, at least in Sydney, appeared to have peaked in 1995 and 1996 and that the take-up rate looked to be slowing. "Like most epidemics it moves in cycles and this one appears to be past its peak," she said. While less that 2 per cent of Australians had tried heroin, Dr Maher said, a 1996 survey of schools in south-western Sydney showed that in one school 11 per cent of 13-year-old boys had tried heroin in the previous year. The effects of the 1995-96 peak is now being felt through increased break-and-enters, armed robberies and car thefts because it takes up to two years from initiation to the drug to dependency, which is when the criminality begins in earnest. Professor Ian Webster, head of public health at the University of NSW and a member of Prime Minister's drug advisory council, said that the study was an "extremely important" one. It highlighted the need for an integrated approach to dealing with the problem involving not only law enforcement but education, grass roots support and the health system. Australia had led the world in reducing harm "to both the individual and the public" but there was a political shift back towards law enforcement to solve the problem and "this emphasis could cause us to lose ground we have gained". A spokeswoman for the Acting Police Minister, Mr Knowles, said the problem with heroin in NSW was a direct result of the Federal Government cutting funding to the Australian Federal Police and Customs. She said that all heroin was imported and that 80 per cent of it came to Sydney. Until Mr Howard got serious about stopping the problem at the border it would continue. The reason Australia suffered such an epidemic in the first place appears to be related to a flood of high-grade and cheap heroin which effectively halved its cost, Dr Maher said. Since the end of the study in 1997 there has been further drop in price from $30 to $20 a cap. This was combined with some "pretty aggressive and strategic marketing" of the drug. "There also seemed to be some targeting of the poor and disadvantaged areas," Dr Maher said. She said the reason for the apparent slow down in initiation rates appeared to be a wary younger generation having seen their "older brothers and sisters and, in some cases, their parents" become addicted. While there had been a targeting of certain areas the idea of the "drug pusher" was inaccurate and most users were offered the drug by friends. The study also showed that aggressive policing may actually cause harm on the health front as well as driving users to commit other crimes. "One of our participants, a 17-year-old Vietnamese-Australian, had supported her habit through street level selling but was unable to sell because of the police presence," she said. "She held a knife to a shopkeepers throat to get her money." Dr Maher said that rather than a "get tough on junkies" policy there needed to be an expansion of methadone programs and needle exchanges. - --- Checked-by: Melodi Cornett