Pubdate: Fri, 26 Feb 1999 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 1999 David Syme & Co Ltd Contact: http://www.theage.com.au/ Author: Caroline Milburn EXPERT REJECTS ZERO TOLERANCE STAND A former Family Court judge yesterday condemned the zero-tolerance heroin strategy that the Prime Minister, Mr Howard, is believed to be interested in learning more about. Mr John Fogarty, who recently retired from the Family Court and is now a board member of a United Nations-affiliated child-welfare group, said the approach harked back to the dark era of Australia's settlement as a penal colony. ``The zero-tolerance approach is an untenable policy which should be removed from public discussion of drug issues,'' Mr Fogarty told a seminar on youth prisons. ``The idea that deep-seated social and personal issues of young persons leading to drug use can be miraculously overcome by prosecuting and imprisoning is nonsense. It is akin to a reversion to the penal attitude of 200 years ago at the beginning of the establishment of our society.'' Mr Fogarty said the Premier, Mr Jeff Kennett, and the Chief Police Commissioner, Mr Neil Comrie, should be commended for their rejection of zero tolerance as a way to deal with the heroin problem. ``Zero-tolerance policing, with its emphasis on hard-hitting and custodial punishment of minor offences, would impact particularly on the types and number of persons sentenced to senior youth-training centres, causing further strain in our justice system and great injustice to the individuals concerned.'' Mr Fogarty said it was not an exaggeration to describe the heroin problem as a community crisis. But he said Mr Kennett's humane policy on heroin contradicted his Government's push for a new privatised youth detention centre, first announced last year. ``I totally support what the Premier has done on the drug issue, but it's totally inconsistent with the handing over of these youth training centres to private organisations when you've got 80 per cent of the inmates drug affected.'' He said young offenders would not get appropriate treatment in a private detention centre. ``They will be worse off yet, at the same time, the Premier is advocating in the wider perspective a very tolerant, preventative process.'' Defence for Children International, the human rights watchdog of which Mr Fogarty is a member, wrote to the Premier about its concerns that Victoria could soon get Australia's first private youth-detention centre. Mr Fogarty said the organisation received a reply from the Premier's Department saying the Government was considering a proposal to build a private centre but that no decision had been made. Mr Fogarty was speaking at a seminar held by Melbourne University's Centre for Public Policy and LaTrobe University's school of law. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea