PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
29/04/1999
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
11403
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
29 April 1999 TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP ADDRESS TO THE ADELAIDE CENTRAL MISSION BYRON PLACE, ADELAIDE

Subjects: Drugs

E&OE.................

Thank you very much for those very kind words of welcome, and I particularly

acknowledge the presence here today of Brian Watters and David Crosby.

And can I especially thank the mission and the residents, and the

other people who are supported by and use this facility, for the opportunity

of being your guest today.

I want to say a few very brief words about the important work that

organisations such as the Adelaide Central Mission undertake, and

of course to announce in a formal sense, although the funding was

announced a few weeks ago by my colleague Dr Wooldridge, a further

contribution of over a quarter-of-a-million dollars to the mission

which will enable the employment of an additional counsellor to provide

further work to assist the people who continue to need the assistance

of this, and like facilities not only in Adelaide but all around Australia.

This announcement is part of an overall strategy of the Federal government

trying to provide extra help to the many people in the community who

are working so hard to attack the problem of illicit drugs.

And I want to say at the outset ladies and gentlemen, that nobody,

not least the Prime Minister of Australia, pretends that there is

one simple easy solution to the challenge of illicit drugs.

It's been a challenge that has been with us for a long time.

It's a challenge of which the community is perhaps more deeply aware

now than it has been for a very long period of time. And it's a challenge

for which there is no one simple single easy solution.

It needs to attacked in my view in three ways. We need to provide

additional resources and additional energy in educating people against

the dangers of commencing illicit drug use. We need to provide

additional resources to the law enforcement authorities who seek out

those who would profit at the expense of human misery of others.

And indeed we need to work hard against the abuse of alcohol within

our community, as indeed we need to work hard against the abuse of

gambling within our community. And I have certainly as Prime

Minister have spoken often of the need to fight against the abuse

of gambling within our community. And finally, as part of the three

pronged approach if I can put it that way, we need to put additional

resources into providing treatment facilities for people who have

an addiction problem. And this is a good meeting. Reminds

me of some of the older political meetings I used to go to and I'm

enjoying it immensely.

You need extra resources to go into treatment facilities and that

has been an area that I think has been neglected in the Australian

community, and I don't seek to blame any one section of the community

for that but rather I seek to acknowledge, and I think in common with

others that have been involved in the area, I believe that new and

additional resources ought to be provided. And I'm very pleased

to say that over the last two years my Government has committed more

than $500 million over a period of four years to the war against drugs.

Not only in relation to education, but also in relation to policing

and in relation to treatment facilities.

But ladies and gentlemen, facilities such as Byron House provided

by the Adelaide Central Mission, facilities such as Byron House provide

a vital support capacity to those in our community who need help,

and who need assistance: people who have a problem with alcohol addiction,

people who have a problem with other forms of drug addiction, people

who are suffering the impact of homelessness. And I want to

pay a special tribute to the work of organisations such as the Adelaide

Central Mission. I have long admired the contribution of our

great welfare organisations, the city missions, the St Vincent de

Paul, the Salvation Army, and all the other great organisations that

provide in a very selfless way, the necessity to assist the people

of Australia who need assistance and who are suffering particular

problems of addiction and a particular problem of personal and family

distress.

So I am here today to principally applaud the work of the Adelaide

Central Mission, to remind those who work in facilities such as this

just how valuable their work is. We do need a social coalition

in the Australian community to deal with this challenge. The

government can't do it on its own. The welfare organisations

can't do it on their own. The families of people who have a

drug problem can't do it on their own. What is needed is a coalition

between all of those. And rather than at a political level there

be a preoccupation with some of the differences that might exist between

different governments about how you approach this problem, what we

need to do within our community is to focus on those views that we

have in common, to focus on the common commitment of Federal and State

governments across the political divide to trying to make a difference.

Now, nobody has, as I said at the beginning of my remarks, nobody

has all of the answers. I don't seek to make a political issue

of the campaign against drugs. I am as prepared to work with

a Labor Premier of New South Wales and a Labor Premier of Queensland,

as I am to work with the Liberal Premiers of Victoria and South Australia.

This is an issue which is above and beyond party politics. And

I was reminded the other day that in the first speech that I made

to the Federal Parliament as Leader of the Liberal Party, I argued

that fighting drugs should be something that transcended the political

divide within the Australian community. And I'm very pleased

that many of the initiatives I've launched, and many of the views

that I've expressed on these issues are very directly echoed and supported

by both Mr Carr, the Premier of New South Wales, and Mr Beattie the

Premier of Queensland, and indeed in many respects, by the Leader

of the Opposition Mr Beazley.

But ladies and gentlemen, I'm very pleased indeed to launch the particular

programme which will provide additional counselling facilities, to

help people with a drug and alcohol problem. I congratulate

the mission. It's a magnificent example of the sort of organisation

that ought to be supported by the 'Tough on Drugs' strategy, and it

is a living proof of the need for that social coalition between the

Federal government, the State governments, the business community,

the welfare sector, and families who are concerned to help their members

and indeed to help their friends who are suffering from the scourge

of drug addiction. I thank the mission for having me here today

and I congratulate it most warmly and most generously on the humanitarian

work that it is undertaking.

[ends]

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