The scourge of heroin

Sir, - Thank goodness for the rock of common-sense which is Fintan O'Toole, and his article on our attitude to heroin and other…

Sir, - Thank goodness for the rock of common-sense which is Fintan O'Toole, and his article on our attitude to heroin and other drugs. For it is time, surely, for us to "grasp the nettle", radically modify our thinking, and realise that the drugs problem is not going to go away of its own accord. I totally agree with P. Bowler (June 5th) when he says that anti-drugs legislation has proved itself to be, in the main, ineffective, possibly even encouraging the use of drugs by glamorising the situation; and drugs are as procurable today as if they were available from every corner shop.

So why not make it so? Tobacconists' shops and corner hostelries - the modern-day opium dens - already deal out death-inducing drugs, in the form of tobacco and alcohol, the former of which was the subject of a very comprehensive report in The Irish Times only this week, in connection with World No Tobacco Day. Why not widen their repertoire, by legalising heroin, cannabis, ecstasy, etc., and, by so doing, introduce a Government quality standard to ensure that tragic deaths - such as what is happening at the moment to hapless heroin users by their injecting of tainted product - be avoided? The cost of such a scheme could be met by the introduction of a special excise duty on drugs, just as is the norm today on packets of cigarettes and bottles of booze.

A knock-on effect of this scheme would be to lower the price of drugs and to increase availability, so addicts would literally be getting more for less. Crime would be lowered - remember the bus shelter ads of last year which stated "Your Hi-Fi - His Next High"? - because there would be less need to resort to crime to acquire the much lower funds to partake of a substance which would now, suddenly, be socially acceptable, and available at a much more affordable cost. Needless to remark, a minimum age-limit for purchasers of these products would have to be enforced, as already applies so successfully to the sale of cigarettes and cider to minors.

It is time for the Government to act decisively, and level the playing field. As the old adage has it, "if you can't beat 'em, join 'em", and it is anomalous to have, on the one hand, harmful drugs which are made all the more injurious by the absence of Government approval and quality control, yet, on the other hand, to have equally lethal drugs available, legally, at an over-the-counter price which includes a very handsome consideration for the Exchequer. - Yours, etc.,

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D.K. Henderson, Castle Avenue, Clontarf, Dublin 3.