Pubdate: Wed, 04 Aug 1999 Source: Canberra Times (Australia) Contact: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/ Author: Colin P. Glover THE PM'S 'SIGNAL' ON DRUGS IS A CALLOUS ONE I AM tired of hearing the Prime Minister's oft-repeated, facile, trite excuse, "sending the wrong signal'', whereby he consigns any attempt to deal with the demand side of the drug equation, including the all-important harm-minimisation principle, to the secondary sidelines. He should tell us what the wrong signal says and to whom it is addressed. I think it says: "We mustn't do anything to upset the US Drug Enforcement Agency by any act that can be construed as official approval of heroin distribution or control that might undermine the total prohibition platform that gets re-iterated whenever the PM talks to the USA.'' I think he has been brainwashed and threatened with the boycott of the Tasmanian opium industry. The signal he sends to me is that a callous political decision has been taken on a human problem. it is almost as if the interests of the drug barons and their fellow travellers are driving the Government's attitude. COLIN P. GLOVER, Canberra City - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck