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News (Media Awareness Project) - Australia: Column: No Zero-Tolerance Drug Policy!
Title:Australia: Column: No Zero-Tolerance Drug Policy!
Published On:2009-02-15
Source:Green Left Weekly (Australia)
Fetched On:2009-02-15 20:39:51
NO ZERO-TOLERANCE DRUG POLICY!

The death of Gemma Thoms at the Perth Big Day Out music festival on
February 1 was tragic and preventable.

Reportedly, Thoms quickly swallowed several ecstasy pills at once,
afraid that they would be detected by sniffer dogs. This kind of
panicked response is not unusual. It happens at countless festivals,
pubs and clubs around the country.

Many have argued that the use of sniffer dogs at music festivals and
other venues is responsible for this risky behaviour. In September
2006 the NSW Ombudsman addressed this concern in his review of the
police use of drug detection dogs.

However, the police and the politicians responsible for the policy
continue to deny any responsibility in the death of Thoms.

The reality is that this "zero-tolerance" approach means that harm
minimisation for people who choose to take drugs is ignored.
Recreational drug users are treated as hardened criminals.

Police Commissioner Karl O'Callaghan denied any
police responsibility for the death. He told the February
4 Australian: "Some of their propositions are quite frankly absurd
and suggest that police should turn a blind eye, do nothing about
drug possession, and ignore the state's laws regarding illegal drugs".

However, by indicating that "we [the police] will be at the Big Day
Out next year doing exactly the same thing" in an interview with ABC
local radio, O'Callaghan has shown that he is turning a blind eye to
the possibility of more deaths occurring.

You need only to look at the numbers and types of arrests to see
that this strategy targets recreational drug users rather than drug dealers.

Dance culture website, inthemix.com reported that there were "60
drug-related charges handed out on the day including 55 for
possession, three for intent to sell or supply and four for
possessing smoking implements".

This policing strategy neither works to reduce drug-related problems
nor protects the public. But rather it is used as a public relations
exercise to make an example of people and to be seen to be doing something.

Melbourne DJ Meg Mundell pointed in the February 4 Age that young
people "take drugs for different reasons: to enhance the effects of
music, lose inhibitions, escape everyday reality, experience altered
states, block out problems, bond socially, copy their friends, have
fun or just stay awake".

The police's "zero tolerance" strategy does not address any of these
reasons, but rather relies on creating an aura of fear -- the same
fear that caused Gemma Thoms to take all her drugs at once.

Young people are not the only age group that uses drugs. It has been
common knowledge than in many highly paid professions with long
working hours, cocaine and amphetamine use is high.

A high profile case was the death of Melbourne QC Peter Hayes after
he was found unconscious in an Adelaide hotel in 2007. Another
Melbourne lawyer Andrew Fraser was jailed for possession and
trafficking in 2001 after he developed a $1000-a-day cocaine habit.

Conservative Melbourne barrister Peter Faris, claimed on his blog in
March 2007, "I have had anecdotal evidence over the last 7 years or
so that cocaine is the drug of choice of high-flyers on the
Melbourne legal scene."

"Obviously I do not have evidence of all this, but the reports that
I have are sufficiently common to make the matter very disturbing."

He also stated that "When we witness the tragedy of young people
dying from drug overdoses, we sometimes (partly) explain it by youth
and immaturity. That makes it all the more shocking if some of the
leaders of the legal profession are risking death by the use of cocaine."

Despite this, we do not see police applying for warrants for the use
of sniffer dogs at legal profession social events or corporate boardrooms.

Rather, police are targeting venues and events
attended predominantly by young people.

Without addressing the reasons for why young people, or anyone else,
chooses to take drugs the government cannot claim to be concerned
about harm minimisation or protecting the public.

Today's drug laws simply persecute the small-time recreational users
- -- targeting young people and working class people.
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