Pubdate: Mon, 30 Nov 1998 Date: 11/30/1998 Source: Irish Independent (Ireland) Author: Martin Cooke Sir - Much was written during the recent European Drug Prevention Week about the scourge of drugs, and what we can do to combat it. However, very little attention was given to the question of just why the problem has become so severe. I believe that it is the very fact that the drugs are illegal in the first place that is the whole cause of the problem. This gives them a value far beyond their real market value, and leaves them in the hands of unscrupulous dealers. And addiction, which should be considered a medical problem, becomes a legal one - with an increase in acquisitive crime to fund the addiction - and the spending of hundreds of millions of tax-payers' money on trying to solve the problem through the prison system. I note that the Garda Commissioner, Mr Pat Byrne, was recently reported to have expressed surprise that the price of illegal drugs on the street has not risen after recent seizures. If this surprises Mr Byrne, it comes as no surprise to me. The market for illegal drugs is so massive that little that the law enforcement agencies can do alone is going to make a difference. The UN estimates the total world trade in illegal drugs as $400 billion per annum, or about 88% of the total value of legitimate international commerce. As Niall Stokes wrote in the Hot Press the month before Veronica Guerin was murdered: "It seems blindingly obvious that the best way to beat the drug barons is to take their market away from them.... And if, to do this, it is necessary to legalise heroin ... under state supervision, then that is the route to go." Switzerland has been dispensing heroin to registered addicts for the past few years. Nearly one third of the approximately 1100 addicts on the scheme have entered programs to help them fully withdraw from the drug. Other effects of the scheme have been: lower rates of AIDS and other infectious diseases, the re-integration of a sizeable percentage of the addicts back into the labour market, and a dramatic drop in crime, saving the taxpayers money. Is it not perhaps time that such a program was put in place in Ireland? Indeed, I read a report a few weeks ago in which Father Sean Cassin, former head of the Merchants Quay project, told a Dail Committee that the Swiss project had claimed "significantly good" results, and that perhaps we should consider copying it. However, one thing that did worry me about the Garda Commissioner's comments (given during the presentation of prizes in an anti-drugs schools art competition) was his attempt to demonise cannabis (marijuana) to the young people he was addressing. It may well be true (as Mr Byrne claimed) that 50% of heroin addicts have used cannabis before using heroin. But this does not mean that the cannabis led on to the heroin, no more than the fact that they may have eaten potatoes before using heroin and that that potatoes should be blamed. MARTIN COOKE, Drumkeerin, Co Leitrim. Author's Note: I left in the obvious typographical errors that the newspaper made in printing this letter of mine. In particular their claim that the drug trade is 88% of the legal world trade (I said 8% in the letter I sent)