Pubdate: Tue, 29 Jun 1999 Source: Daily Telegraph (Australia) Copyright: News Limited 1999 Contact: http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/ Author: L. Clarke RHETORIC WON'T SOLVE DRUG PROBLEM WHY IS your reporter (Daily Telegraph, June 28) so surprised at the openness of the drug dealing at Kings Cross? I live close to Roslyn St, so I see these people every day, as do most of the people living around the Cross. I also see the results of the dealers' operations, shooting up on the steps of the local church and passed out in doorways. There are always syringes in the gutters. For some reason, though, the police do not seem to be able stop the dealers or are not interested in what is going on under their noses. If politicians would only get their heads out of the sand and do something constructive we could get rid of this in one fell swoop. There is a lot of talk about providing shooting galleries - why not go the whole hog, do it properly and supply the drugs. That way you get rid of the middleman and it introduces some element or control. It is a hard choice to take but, for all the political rhetoric, the situation is just getting worse. I believe that many years ago heroin used to be supplied under prescription but because of pressure from the American Government, addicts lost their safe supply and were forced into finding alternative sources. Of course, the criminal elements welcomed these changes with open arms. There will be a lot of people who will think this is a dumb idea - but the alternative is just not working. Treating addicts as criminals only leads to more crime and the time has come to be realistic. L. CLARKE, Elizabeth Bay - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea