News (Media Awareness Project) - Australia: Web: Police Worried At Substance Abuse Increase |
Title: | Australia: Web: Police Worried At Substance Abuse Increase |
Published On: | 2004-03-31 |
Source: | Australian Broadcasting Corporation (Australia Web) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 13:43:21 |
POLICE WORRIED AT SUBSTANCE ABUSE INCREASE
Alice Springs police are concerned at an increasing trend towards substance
abuse among juveniles in the town.
Superintendent Trevor Bell says the level of substance abuse was previously
seen in remote communities but not Alice Springs.
"It's probably getting to the stage where a lot of the juveniles in town, or
I wouldn't say a lot but a number of them, are starting to get involved in
substance abuse," he said.
"That is petrol, paints, glue and marijuana and those sorts of things.
"They're starting to get involved in things they shouldn't be and as a
result of that they're committing some offences and doing some things they
shouldn't be doing."
Meanwhile, the Northern Territory Parliament has heard a debate on the
damage petrol sniffing is doing to remote Indigenous communities.
One Labor member of the Select Committee on Substance Abuse says sniffing
can only be confronted by making it a crime.
Debating the committee's interim report, the Member for Sanderson, Len
Kiely, told Parliament police find they can not intervene when young people
are sniffing petrol and can only charge them with offences relating to
stealing the fuel or their behaviour while affected by the fumes.
He says the act of sniffing itself must be made an offence.
Mr Kiely says bringing petrol onto communities that have banned it and
switched to alternative fuels should also be made a crime.
His speech was applauded by the CLP Member for Araluen, Jodeen Carney, who
called it his best in two-and-a-half-years in Parliament.
Alice Springs police are concerned at an increasing trend towards substance
abuse among juveniles in the town.
Superintendent Trevor Bell says the level of substance abuse was previously
seen in remote communities but not Alice Springs.
"It's probably getting to the stage where a lot of the juveniles in town, or
I wouldn't say a lot but a number of them, are starting to get involved in
substance abuse," he said.
"That is petrol, paints, glue and marijuana and those sorts of things.
"They're starting to get involved in things they shouldn't be and as a
result of that they're committing some offences and doing some things they
shouldn't be doing."
Meanwhile, the Northern Territory Parliament has heard a debate on the
damage petrol sniffing is doing to remote Indigenous communities.
One Labor member of the Select Committee on Substance Abuse says sniffing
can only be confronted by making it a crime.
Debating the committee's interim report, the Member for Sanderson, Len
Kiely, told Parliament police find they can not intervene when young people
are sniffing petrol and can only charge them with offences relating to
stealing the fuel or their behaviour while affected by the fumes.
He says the act of sniffing itself must be made an offence.
Mr Kiely says bringing petrol onto communities that have banned it and
switched to alternative fuels should also be made a crime.
His speech was applauded by the CLP Member for Araluen, Jodeen Carney, who
called it his best in two-and-a-half-years in Parliament.
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