Source: Canberra Times (Australia) Contact: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/ Pubdate: Tue, 15 Dec 1998 Page: 6 Author: Geoff Page PROHIBITION ALWAYS BREED CRIMINALITY IT WAS interesting to read Roderick Campbell's account of the committee of government lawyers' report on uniform penalties for illicit drug use (CT, December 4, p.11) and see how easily the obvious seems to escape the collective legal mind. When asked by the Commonwealth not to list steroid users with other users of illicit drugs, the rest of the committee rejected the idea saying, "The mechanisms of illicit supply are depressingly familiar and no different in their essentials from illicit trafficking in other manufactured pharmaceutical drugs". They seem amazed that this should be the case. Why wouldn't it be? Since when did prohibition not breed criminality? They might have done better to reflect that those much more problematic drugs, tobacco and alcohol, have long been regulated rather than prohibited. Unfortunately, a certain percentage of humanity is always going to use drugs for short-term pleasure even when they're told of their long-term dangers. Surely it is better that they be educated as to exactly what these dangers are and be able to buy their drugs in a legal and regulated context rather than risk death from day to day with substances of unknown purity, substances for which they have often had to steal to pay unnecessarily inflated prices. The lawyers talk very sensibly of how care will be needed in the area of penalties for young people using, and trading in, illicit drugs, saying, "There is no area of prohibition in which inappropriate resort to the criminal law is more likely to aggravate, rather than minimise the harms associated with illicit drugs'. How do they not see that all resorting to the criminal law in these matters (other than the low level needed for regulation) is similarly inappropriate? GEOFF PAGE, Narrabundah - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski