Pubdate: Wed, 19 May 1999 Source: Illawarra Mercury (Australia) Copyright: Illawarra Newspapers Contact: http://mercury.illnews.com.au/ BATTLE LINES DRAWN AS SUMMIT DEEPENS The head of Prime Minister John Howard's drugs advisory council came under fire yesterday as battle lines emerged between conservatives and reformers at the NSW drug summit. The Salvation Army's Major Brian Watters maintained his opposition to any relaxation of drug laws, saying allowing shooting galleries would lead to the legalisation of heroin, cocaine and amphetamines. ``What we are really looking at is an incremental shift in policy that would involve ... the availability of what are currently illicit drugs,'' he told the summit. Under questioning from reformers, Maj Watters stood by the abstinence-based approach that he has advocated as head of Mr Howard's advisory council. ``I don't know what the experts know but I know what I know,'' he said. Uniting Church Reverend Harry Herbert said Maj Watters was engaging in ``trench warfare'' over decriminalisation of marijuana. Drugs campaigner Tony Trimingham, one of the organisers of the ``T-Room'' illegal shooting gallery, drew gasps when he asked Maj Watters to explain why he once said ``the wages of sin are death and addiction is a sin''. Maj Watters said he had been quoting the Bible to show that choosing treatment was like choosing ``God's gift of life'' for addicts. Professor Peter Reuter of Maryland University said there was no scientific evidence to show that US-style zero tolerance policies would curb the drug problem. ``Beware of Americans bearing certainties,'' he said. ``The end of the Cold War may have been a good thing but it has not made American policy-makers one bit more humble; particularly in this area they are prone to claims that I would argue are implausible, particularly as to the values of toughness.'' Meantime, one of the Government's strongest opponents of heroin shooting galleries, Cabramatta MP Reba Meagher, softened her stance by calling for a referendum on the issue at the September local government elections. Ms Meagher said local communities needed the final say on whether shooting galleries were established in their area. ``Many residents of Kings Cross may support safe injecting rooms while the community of Cabramatta has continually opposed them,'' she said. Christian Democrats MP Fred Nile said addicts could be housed in army barracks for 12 months while they underwent treatment with Naltrexone, the blocker drug that prevents addicts getting a hit from heroin. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart