Pubdate: Wed, 02 Dec 1998 Source: Svenska Dagbladet (Sweden) Contact: http://www.svd.se/svd/ettan/dagens/index.html Copyright: 1998 SvD GERMANY IS NOT PUNISHING HASHISH USERS Svenska Dagbladet, November 29. Germany who has for a long time been in the European forefront with a strict and inflexible drug policy is now turning toward a softer approach. Under its new government shall even heavy users of heroin be able to obtain the narcotic under prescription. "The German Government shall naturally not sell heroin. But we must realize that there are a small group of users that do not accept methadone. Those must have legal access to the real thing" says the Minister of Public Health, Environmentalist Andrea Fischer. The German Government is therefore asking the equivalent of FDA to approve a pilot program allowing local communities to start heroin dispensing programs. Under the pilot program users will receive daily doses under condition that they participate in special therapeutic sessions. Already in place in several large German cities are "shooting galleries" where users can obtain clean utensils for injecting drugs. Frankfurt has four such galleries which are used daily by hundreds of addicts. The proposed program is at the moment in a legal and political limbo, tolerated and condoned by the Prosecutor General, but still forbidden on paper. The Bonn Government is now preparing legislation which will allow all these programs. Minister of Public Health, Andrea Fischer also wants to de-dramatize the consumption of marijuana and hashish. Persons discovered with these drugs for personal consumption shall not be prosecuted. This is already a facts in several of Germany's Bundesrepubliks but not all. The Government wants the more liberal view to be a national policy. "Cannabis is naturally not harmless" says the Minister "But it should be compared to alcohol. Users here who are responsible and only drink a half glass or so every evening have no problems." In the recent election campaign the Environmental Party argued for a complete legalization of hashish and marijuana for users over the age of sixteen. The Social Democrats refused to allow this platform when the Government was formed. The Social Democrats do, however, also agree that the hard policy of the previous Kohl government has failed. "Zero Tolerance" is a term that sounds nice but doesn't help the problem according to the SPD experts who point out that the number of addicts has remained stable for many years. In Germany there are today between 100,000 - 150,000 users of heavy drugs and if ecstasy is included approximately twice this number. The number of fatal drug overdoses was last year approximately 1,500 a reduction from 2,000 eight years ago. At the same time the number of alcoholics is estimated at 2,3 Million with 40,000 fatalities annually. - --- Checked-by: derek rea