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It's a war on people

Carl Wagner

Letters, Hull Daily Mail

Friday 08 Feb 2002

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Hull and East Riding DAT have no right to claim credit for
a reduction in heroin related death, particularly 2 months
before the figures are due.

As recently as June 2001, forty people across Scotland,
Ireland and as far south as Brighton died as a result of
heroin contaminated with a bacteria from the same family as
tetanus and botulism.

This could happen anywhere in the country at any time and
these deaths, like most drug related deaths, were not a
result of drug use, but a direct consequence of present
prohibition policies.

Three decades of prohibition has increased heroin addiction
from 500 in the late sixties, to anything up to 500,000
today. With the addicts come 3.5 billion pounds of property
theft, gang warfare, street robbery, countless deaths and
disease.

In the mid 90s, the World Health Organisation estimated that
40% of recent Aids cases internationally had been caused by
drug users sharing needles and by June last year, 1,000
black-market drug users in this country had died of Aids
believed to have been contracted from dirty needles.

Worse still is the spread of hepatitis C, which can kill by
causing cirrhosis and sometimes cancer in the liver. The
official estimate is that 300,000 people in this country are
now infected, but Dr Tom Waller, who chairs Action on
Hepatitis C, says the truth is likely to be much worse.

Almost all of these victims are black-market drug users who
contracted the disease by sharing dirty needles.

The war on drugs relies on ignorance and fear, it is biased
against class, contemptuous of basic human rights, wastes
billions of pounds of taxpayers money, corrupts policing,
penal and judicial systems, and is used by political parties
to dodge the responsibility to ensure adequate health,
housing and education for all citizens.

It's a war on people and to blindly carry on is both
dangerous and immoral.

Carl Wagner

 

 

 

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