Pubdate: Thu, 16 Dec 1999 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 1999 David Syme & Co Ltd Contact: 250 Spencer Street, Melbourne, 3000, Australia Website: http://www.theage.com.au/ Author: Darren Gray, Sandra McKay and Janine MacDonald STATES DEFY PM ON HEROIN PLANS Victoria, NSW and the ACT are set to defy the Prime Minister, Mr John Howard, and proceed next year with controversial trials of up to seven heroin injecting rooms. Senior members of all three governments said yesterday they remained strongly committed to legal injecting rooms in a bid to save the lives of drug addicts - despite a plea by Mr Howard to put their plans on hold. Mr Howard's intervention on Tuesday, when he released a letter from an international drug agency criticising the planned NSW injecting room, also provoked federal criticism. The Opposition Leader, Mr Kim Beazley, accused the Prime Minister of looking backwards and the leader of the Australian Democrats, Senator Meg Lees, said Mr Howard's position was dangerously short-sighted and disappointing. Labor said it would not support the Government if it tried to legislate against the states' injecting rooms. Five Democrat senators contacted yesterday expressed the same view. But the Victorian Health Minister, Mr John Thwaites, said he did not believe the Federal Government would try to stop a trial that could save lives. "We're not going to be dominated by a head-in-the-sand traditionalist approach when so many people are dying," he said. "This is just a trial we're talking about, but it's a trial that has to take place if we're going to reduce the terrible death rate from heroin overdose." The NSW Special Minister of State, Mr John Della Bosca, and the Victorian Premier, Mr Steve Bracks, discussed the states' position at a meeting in Melbourne yesterday and agreed to consult with the Commonwealth over the legal ramifications of injecting rooms, but said there was no need "at this stage" for a joint state response. The ACT Chief Minister, Mrs Kate Carnell, said she would be happy to discuss the issue with the Federal Government. Mr Della Bosca said: "This trial needs to proceed as an Australian response to this problem ... not be dictated to by a foreign body." He accused Mr Howard of being "selective" in raising the United Nations International Narcotics Control Board's claim that the states' plans could put Australia in breach of international obligations. The Government, he said, had ignored other international conventions. Mr Howard yesterday said he remained opposed to injecting facilities and medically prescribed heroin trials. He said that Australia made its own decisions. "What I'm saying ... is, can we talk about this? I'm not threatening anything at this stage." - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst