Pubdate: Sat, 30 Oct 1999 Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Contact: http://www.smh.com.au/ Author: Paola Totaro HEROIN DECREE SPLITS CATHOLICS The Catholic Church in Sydney and Melbourne was further divided last night as the Vatican's intervention in Sydney's heroin injecting room project widened the chasm between conservative and progressive Catholics. And while the Uniting Church signalled it would explore the possibility of taking over the experiment in Sydney, Victoria's Catholic Premier, Mr Bracks, also vowed to go ahead with his trial of five injecting rooms in Melbourne. Rome's order to the Sisters of Charity to abandon the trial was revealed only hours before the NSW Upper House passed the Drug Reform Bill unamended on Thursday. But the Vatican's decree also angered some Catholic laity and was strongly criticised by many figures in the Church hierarchy. In a statement headed "In solidarity with the Sisters of Charity", the Australian Conference of Leaders of Religious Institutes - representing 10,000 priests, brothers and nuns - criticised the Vatican's lack of debate. The conference's executive director, Sister Mary Cresp, said the decision by the Sisters of Charity to operate the trial room flowed from compassionate concern for those severely affected by drug abuse. A spokesman for the Archdiocese of Sydney, Father Brian Lucas, said the Archbishop, Cardinal Edward Clancy, had submitted a question "for clarification on the issue" to the powerful Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith in early October and that in later correspondence St Vincent's and the sisters had provided a dossier. But it is understood that St Vincent's and the sisters deny that this material could be regarded as a "submission" and that they were given any opportunity to argue their case. However, speaking on ABC Radio, Mr Paul Brazier, a barrister who heads the Conservative Catholics' Advocacy Centre, said the injecting room plan should have never have been adopted because it was "formal co-operation in evil, which the Catholic Church has made plain no Catholic - or anyone, for that matter - is entitled to do". Father Steve Sinn, of St Canice's parish in Kings Cross, said he believed the difficulty with the Pope's order was that not everyone had been consulted: "That is what makes it hard to accept. There is a huge reservoir of loyalty inside the Catholic Church and people will obey. "[Rome's] view is that it [an injecting room] sends out the wrong signals ... to those who don't use drugs, presumably. But that viewpoint ignores the suffering of those who are addicts and who have nowhere to go to use. "They are marginalised and voiceless and helpless, and it is that group that is the most at risk. In not providing a room but providing needles we are putting this so-called wider good of a 'message being sent' against their immediate need." The director of Jesuit Social Services in Melbourne, Father Peter Norden, suggested the Vatican look "more closely" at what was happening in the grounds of the parishes of Kings Cross and in many other Catholic churches around Australia, where drug addicts injected in church toilets and school grounds. "Our drug treatment programs in Melbourne are all directed towards moving addicted persons towards rehabilitation and a drug-free lifestyle," he said. "Catholic Church agencies are clearly not intending to give the message that drug addiction can be tolerated." The Prime Minister, Mr Howard, refused to be drawn on whether the Vatican should have intervened, but said he was pleased with its decision. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea