Pubdate: Tue, 20 Oct 1998 Source: Courier-Mail, The (Australia) Page: 19 Contact: http://www.thecouriermail.com.au/ Copyright: News Limited 1998 Author: Paul Wilson is a writer and criminologist LEST WE FORGET LOST GENERATION The weekend heroin overdose death of a 16-year-old student in Inala again has highlighted Australia's drugs crisis THIS Sunday, national remembrance services will be held for people who have lost their lives through illegal drug use. The ceremony, organised by the families and friends of the victims of the drug trade, is an attempt by a dedicated group of adults to break the silence of prejudice and ignorance that surrounds one of the greatest killers of young Australians. Like many social problems - youth suicide or road traffic deaths for example - the human tragedy involved in drug deaths generally remains emotionally distant from most of us. When it strikes an individual family, however, what was distant and academic becomes a gut-wrenching personal reality. Just last weekend, drugs became a real issue in our household when my daughter arrived from Sydney to try to rescue a heavily addicted former friend. Although their friendship had broken up two years before, she felt an obligation to try to help him. The young man used to be a healthy, fit and successful music entrepreneur. Now, as a result of years of injecting and ingesting almost every illegal substance he could get his hands on, he was a living skeleton, slowly dying on his feet. When we contacted drug rehabilitation centres, however, we found it was impossible to get him admitted to any treatment programme. To begin with, there were few centres and most of them were full. Those that had vacancies required the addict to be "clean" or drug-free, so he did not qualify. As he had not yet overdosed, it was pointless taking him to a hospital emergency service. In a last desperate measure, he decided to take himself off and camp on the beaches of Stradbroke Island in order to, in the words of my daughter, "cleanse himself of drugs or to die in the process". The young man's plight reminded me of the cheap shot Senator Nick Bolkus made about John Howard's drug policies almost a month ago. Bolkus tried to imply that Howard's "zero tolerance" approach to eliminating drugs was responsible for the huge rise in drug deaths in Australia. Of course it wasn't, because the death rate had begun to climb sharply well before Howard became Prime Minister. But the Bolkus comment underlined some facts about drugs that politicians of all persuasions conveniently ignore - death rates are rising at a time when the black market price for heroin is spiralling downwards while the purity level is increasing. Yet though this formula almost guarantees more young addicts and more deaths, drug treatment centres are struggling to survive. The money, it appears, is still pouring into police, customs and other enforcement activities with only very limited success. Despite the record 400kg seizure of heroin recently, the Federal Police and customs admit that they intercept at best no more than 15 per-cent of all heroin imported into Australia. As a community, we have every reason to be worried about drugs. Soon-to-be-released Queensland Police figures on juvenile crime will show that though, over the past 12 months, youth crime is static or even down in some categories (such as homicide and other violent crime), drug arrests have increased by nearly 20 percent. These, and other drug use indices, suggest that juvenile offending will not stay static for long. Instead, we can expect an explosion of youthful crimes - against people and property. Sunday's "remembrance day" is more than just a ceremony to mourn those who have died in the drug wars. It is also a plea for a revolutionary approach towards drugs that would emphasise education and not enforcement and rehabilitation rather than revenge. It would also put back on the policy agenda the legal dispensation of drugs to registered addicts. If we don't change our mind-set about how we deal with drugs, then we can expect more and more of our young to die in this continuing and pointless tragedy. - --- Checked-by: Rich O'Grady