|
For
the very first time, drug users were part of the opening and closing plenary
speakers at the 10th anniversary of the International Harm Reduction Conference,
held this year in Geneva. As drug using activists from all over the globe
came together, it seemed to herald an international resurgence of strength
and solidarity as drug users gained unprecedented acceptance as an integral
part of the Harm Reduction Movement. Here is the opening speech of the
conference, written and delivered by Jude Byrne, a deeply respected drug
user activist from Australia. She highlights The History of The Drug Users
Movement and what it Has Taken to Get Us Here in 1999........
The development of the drug user movement over the past decade from Liverpool
to Geneva is perfectly encapsulated for me in this quote from 'A Tale
of Two Cities:
"It
was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom,
it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the
epoch of incredulity, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of
despair we had everything before us, we had nothing before us"
After
so many years of drug users being vilified and discriminated against the
harm reduction movement represented an opportunity for us to have input.
Prior to this our treatments, our lives and our futures were inextricably
woven with a movement that had no understanding or acceptance of our choices,
our lives, our rituals and our communities. We were not seen as partners
in a movement, rather, as dysfunctional people who needed things done
to them to get better.
Harm
reduction appears, in the drug and alcohol movement in approximately 1985
in several countries. However it was not until 1989 that the international
harm reduction movement and these conferences commenced. This development
paved the way for the development of the international drug users movement.
The
drug users movement history is just a little shorter than the history
of mankind itself. I have that on the greatest of authority, mine. For
it seems there has always been someone proscribing the use of some substance
for social political or religious motivations. However I will not be able
to discuss the entire history of the drug users movement, or even the
developments over the past decade in individual countries. I am thrilled
to say we have so many drug user groups in existence it would take more
time than this entire conference has allotted. Individual countries will
only be discussed in the context of the international drug user movement
primarily within the international harm reduction movement.
In
the early seventies, two very different types of drug user organisations
were developing, CCMP and Junkie Bond. Junkie Bond, the earliest drug
user groups developed in the Netherlands in the 1970s. According to Peter
MacDermott in his paper" Will drug users respond to the challenge"
it was started "by a couple of activists who were tired of the treatment
they got and wanted to do something about it they lobbied politicians
and the media to present an accurate picture of the lives of drug users
and to gain a voice in policy making. Faced with an outbreak of Hepatitis
B in 1982 they distributed clean needles and syringes to combat the virus-
and the first needle exchange was born"
Joscelyn Wood (USA) writes in her paper 'Advocacy the voice of the consumer',
" Thus is was against the background of offensive attacks that in
the spring of 1973 a vanguard of patient's met to explore the possibility
of organizing the first methadone advocacy group. The Committee of Concerned
Methadone Patients and Friends inc, CCMP. CCMP were to be involved in
two Class Action Suites but the outcomes had an impact on a much wider
scale. Discrimination and systematic oppressions could be dealt with on
their terms, we had to meet them face on and confront them with their
inequality. We could not just sit back and bemoan our fate, an incredibly
important lesson for the drug user movement.
The
first case was " Beazer vs New York City Transit Authority' Where
the Honorable Judge Thomas Griesa ruled that, ' A public entity such as
the transit Authority cannot bar persons from employment on the basis
of criteria which have no rational relation to the skills of the job to
be performed. To do so is a violation of both the due process and equal
protection clause of the Fourteenth amendment'.
The second class action suite involved the Beth Israel Methadone Maintenance
Treatment Program. They were dispensing a new methadone formula. The new
formula was bitter, so sweetener was added. This sweetener caused the
formula to spoil and grow mold. Patients began to experience a range of
health related problems due to the new formulae people began taking days
off work and school and the symptoms of nausea sweating and fever incapacitated
them. When is was obvious Beth Israel was not going to revert o the old
formula despite these effects CCMP was forced into action. In July 1995
a class civil action suite was initiated .The Harlem medication case presided
over by Honorable Judge Motly ruled the continued use of the formula was
a blatant violation of patients civil rights. Beth Israel returned to
the proven formula. Although only active for four years the CCMP paved
the way for the national alliance of methadone Advocates NAAMA which now
has members and affiliated around the world. The common experience of
methadone patients has developed an international drug user response.
Although the language had not been developed, the practice had with the
advent of methadone treatment. Those two examples are what I call bottom
up development, users coming together without any intervention from government
to address issues they have acknowledged as worth fighting for.
The
next area of drug user movement development is what was called so appropriately
by the New Zealand government 'Contrived spontaneity'. I adore that wording
its much more evocative than "A top down approach".
Contrived
spontaneity was the hallmark of the Australian New Zealand drug user group
development. The government provided funding for groups to develop and
implement HIV prevention initiatives to the drug using community. It was
often the case at this time the drug user groups had a 'champion' In Australia's
case it was Dr Alex Wodak, who with some clients of his service developed
a group called ADIC the first drug user group in Australia in 1986. This
group did not last long but it formed the basis of the new group NUAA
that has been funded for the past ten years. It is run for and by current
drug users.
This
support from non-peers was critical at this time. Users did not have the
experience that we brought to the harm reduction debate. We were literally
still in hiding. It took sometime for users to realise that we could disclose
our drug use without wearing negative consequences, like prison welfare
intervention and police harassment. Although it must be said that even
today we pay a price for our disclosure. This is one of the reasons why
it is still so difficult to recruit members to the drug user movement
and why there is still the question of whether a drug using community
exists.
Many
of the drug users that came to the drug and alcohol harm reduction movement
had been "blooded" if you will excuse the terminology in the
HIV/AIDS movement. Those countries that responded to HIV/AIDS in a pragmatic
public health paradigm provided the opportunity for drug users to mobilise.
Within the HIV/AIDS response our behavior was not pathologised or seen
in the same moral light. It was merely a human behavior that needed to
be modified for the individual welfare. Abstinence was not the goal, safer
using was.
The
HIV/AIDS movement changed the perception of drug users from that of dysfunctional
individuals requiring substantial medical and welfare interventions to
individuals able to contribute in a meaningful way to the community. For
many drug users involvement in HIV/AIDS was a seminal point in our development
into drug user activists.
By
the Liverpool Conference in 1989 drug users in some countries had experienced
four years in the HIV/AIDS movement. We came to the drug and alcohol movement
with a very different image of ourselves to that which was represented
within the drug and alcohol movement. We were no longer either willing
or able to accept the kind of policy or treatment that pre dated the HIV/AIDS
epidemic.
|