Pubdate: Sun, 28 Oct 2007 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 2007 The Age Company Ltd Contact: http://www.theage.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) WE CANNOT ALLOW A REPEAT OF THE LATE '90S HEROIN SCOURGE NOT long ago it seemed that Victoria had largely been weaned off heroin. Sure, it was still on the street, as it probably always will be, but heroin deaths had dropped to record lows and authorities were confident the scourge was in retreat. This newspaper reported that success. Other illicit, killer drugs, such as "ice", became the focus of police, political and media attention; winning the war against heroin was an old story. Tragically, smack is coming back and drug experts such as Nick Crofts, from the Turning Point centre in Fitzroy, say we need to do some serious thinking about our treatment service. It is, he says, inadequate and struggling to cope with existing demand, let alone with what is yet to come. Says Dr Crofts: "We are working in a policy environment where the previous premier (Steve Bracks) said very clearly heroin is gone and the only problem we have now is amphetamines. Which is utterly wrong. State Government support for both medical treatment for people with addictions and the pharmaco-therapy program is pathetic." If Dr Crofts is right, and we have no reason to doubt him, then we are heading back to the dark, though recent, past of the late 1990s. No one should pretend that dealing with heroin is easy, or simply about spending more. For all the songs about it, heroin is neither glamorous nor easily dealt with. The central issue is supply and, on that score, Australia is on the horns of a dilemma. The rules of supply and demand work with white-light precision in the international drug trade, especially with an agriculture-based crop: supply is booming; purity, too, has improved. With so much heroin to offload, drug runners are taking greater risks to import into countries with a cashed-up population -- where a minority use opiates to escape the realities of day-to-day existence. When there is so much, losing a shipment or two is no big deal. The United Nations is worried. But here's the twist: Afghanistan is the world's largest opium producer, accounting for 93 per cent of the illegal trade. About 3 million of its people, 14 per cent of the population, depend on its cultivation to survive. The insurgency in that country, which this week claimed the life of another Australian soldier, is heavily linked to opium, which earns the cash to keep the Taliban in guns. The United States has long since taken a scorched-earth approach to poppy cultivation in Afghanistan, in part to starve the Taliban, in part to keep heroin off US streets. Australia has taken a perhaps more pragmatic view: we turn a blind eye to opium because, in part, we don't want to provoke retribution. Should we take a different stance? We think so. Australian diggers face great danger in Afghanistan but everything must be done to stop the poppy crop from seeding its tragedies on our streets. Anyone who lived through the heroin epidemic of the late 1990s will remember the toll taken by this pernicious drug. We must do all we can to avoid repeating that. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom