|
Growing alcohol toll rouses concerns in Australia |
In a bid to add a little parity to the UK drugs debate, and prove its not just the UK Labour government who are totally incompetent when it comes to arranging a national drugs policy which centre's on harm reduction over tax collection, the Australian government are also under fire for refusing to act against the all-conquering alcohol industry, until its too late, and Australian citizens, as they are in the UK, are literally dropping dead in their thousands.
| Australia's growing alcohol toll is a national disaster and urgent action is needed to address the threat, Australian Family First senator Steve Fielding said here on Monday.
| A new report - released on Monday by the Australian National Council on Drugs - has found that one in 10 young people aged 12 to 17 had abused alcohol in the past week. Among 16-17-year-olds, the figure rose to one in five.
"It's just outrageous to think we've let this issue get to this stage," Fielding told Australian Associated Press.
|  |
Fielding said it was encouraging the government had supported a Senate inquiry into alcohol advertising, flowing from a bill he introduced that would impose tougher restrictions on the industry.
"It means the government is keen to see some action," he said.
The bill would ban alcohol advertising before 9 p.m., require health information labels on all alcohol products and ensure all alcohol advertising was pre-approved by a government body and did not link drinking to success.
"Alcohol kills three times more Australians than illicit drugs. But as a nation, we have tackled our road toll, we have tackled our drug toll and we've tackled tobacco, but we've done nothing about our alcohol toll," he added.
| | http://news.xinhuanet.com | |
Trackback(0)
|