 My name is Nanna Gottfressen and I'm a street lawyer in Copenhagen. We are at the open drug scene right now. It's just behind the main station in Copenhagen and we have had an open drug scene here for 30 years or 25 or 30 years. What we're doing here with our bike is that we're sending out a legal team providing users and homeless people and outdoor sex workers with legal advices and legal assistance. Yes, a package, a pump and a filter and a water injection needle. We have several kinds of needles that we can offer. If you don't need these then we have some bigger ones and we also have a pump that is bigger but this is what you have in the ordinary set here and to clean up the alcohol set cleaner. And this is the jakey card, information, safer injection. This is a question and then you have the answer on the other side. There's no doubt that law enforcement cannot prevent people from using drugs. Using drugs has other reasons than whether it's criminalized or not. When the police is targeting the open drug scenes you can only make it worse for drug users. They are fighting so hard to stay alive and we can see that on a constantly high death rate in Denmark. This is our office and street lawyer. Drug users and homeless people and all of them are here with us. We can be like 30 or 40 people up here and so we would like some more space. Homeless people are having their clothes and things and papers and like that in the office. We have just a very small internet cafe. This is the map the police is using. We have 14 logo zones and when you are banned it is only drug users and homeless people who are banned from being in these zones. It will cost about 100 euros every time you are in these areas. We have the main station here and the church is here and here in an overlap of three logo zones we have the needle exchange program. So what's the message you're sending? It is do you want a fine or HIV? Pick yourself. Fixer room means use a room or injection room and that's from Vancouver in 2004 but still is like that. And this is two huge garbage disposes in Copenhagen where users are injecting and using their drugs because we don't have injection rooms. Actually it's explaining the choice. What choice do we have? We cannot choose that people are not using. We cannot choose drug free societies and illusion. But we can choose do we want them to inject like this with nurses and safety or would be like this. That's our choice. We have had the discussion about injecting rooms as well for about 15 years in this country. The majority of our politicians still find that establishing safer injecting facilities is too controversial. It's characterised by legalising drugs. So people still have to use around here on the open drug scene in our backyards and they are put at great risks of overdoses, infections and amputations because of that. I also speak in favour of what you could call rooms where you can the injection rooms where you can go inside and take your illegal drugs, get clean needles and also get access to healthcare if you have any diseases or have been infected or have anything that you can get help in these places where you can also take your drugs in a safe place. So we don't have people lying around for instance taking over those outside in the cold weather or during winter. If you have a safe injection facility we hope from the police and I think the citizens hope the same that there will be a very clear reduction in injection pumps and needles around this area. It's my opinion that Denmark as many other states or national states is under social pressure from the UN system or from for example the Americans and others not to engage too much in for instance injection rooms or prescription of heroin and such because they feel that it's undermining the international treaties on the area. The treaties were made in 1961 when the world looked a little different. So I think sometimes the UN should actually system should be in favour of making sure that human rights as for instance securing that people can get access to healthcare or also on a street level even if they're drug users or homeless or lean or alike and actually the UN in this question has been doing the opposite and it's been very unfortunate. We see a room with nurses, doctors, clean room. I think it can be there in few years. Punishment as a tool to prevent people from potentially harming themselves is absurd. So we need to start with decriminalizing drug users at least stop the war on drug users and invite them. They need to be socially included. They need acceptance. They need healthcare. That's the first thing to do.