Pubdate: Sun, 03 Mar 2002
Source: Sunday Herald, The (UK)
Copyright: 2002 Sunday Herald
Contact:  http://www.sundayherald.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/873
Author: Neil Mackay, Home Affairs Editor
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction)

SCOTLAND DECLARES AN END TO THE DRUG WAR

Ministers Declare 'War On Drugs' Is Over

Special Report One: Drugs

No More 'Just Say No' Campaigns ... Instead, Harm Reduction, Rehabilitation 
And Information Will Be The Policy

THIS weekend Scotland's drugs minister has officially declared that the 
30-year war on drugs is over. In an exclusive interview with the Sunday 
Herald, Dr Richard Simpson, also the deputy justice minister, said: 'The 
only time you will hear me use terms such as 'War On Drugs' and 'Just Say 
No' is to denigrate them.'

Instead Simpson has pledged to ensure that Scotland's harm-reduction, 
methadone, and rehabilitation services are fixed.

Simpson, who was a prison doctor, said: 'I've never used the term 'teach 
children how to take drugs', but what I would say is that we need to 
provide them with information. We need to say 'we'd rather you didn't take 
ecstasy, but if you make that decision, here are the risks'. We have to 
give them all the information they need to take responsibility for themselves.

'It's not about us wagging a finger at young people as they won't pay 
attention to that -- so it's not worthwhile. We've got to be very realistic 
and not say 'you're going to die if you take ecstasy', what we will say is 
'some people do die when they take ecstasy but we don't truly know why'.'

He said that 'we can't pretend that we're going to stop the availability of 
drugs' or people using drugs, and the concept of 'Just Say No' had 
therefore been abandoned for good.

In an another interview, the UK pensions minister Ian McCartney, whose son 
died of a heroin overdose because he was not given methadone in jail, told 
the Sunday Herald: 'It wasn't a prison sentence he got, it was a death 
sentence. There is no sense to the current system. Going to jail harmed my 
son and did nothing to address the cause of crime.'

Now he is determined to change the system. 'I'm not just a government 
minister,' he said. 'I'm a parent too, and if I thought our strategy was 
flawed I wouldn't be part of it. The prevailing attitude both in and out of 
government towards addicts has been 'it's all your own fault'. That's why 
we have virtually no treatment services and a legacy of 3000 deaths a year. 
In 20 years, 60,000 people have died -- that's enough to fill Ibrox 
Stadium. That's why we need harm-reduction policies in place.' His Scottish 
government colleague Simpson also edged close to support for a Royal 
Commission on drugs saying that the debate was 'stifled', and issues such 
as legalisation and decriminalisation 'have to be addressed', adding: 'We 
can't have a genuine debate about these issues because some of the press 
turn around and say that's wrong. We need to have that debate, we need to 
be more sophisticated about our approach. I think this parliament has to 
talk about it much more openly.'

As part of an in-depth Sunday Herald investigation into Scotland's drug 
problem, we found that some addicts wait as long as two years to get 
methadone. Simpson said there must be 'adequate resources' for all drug 
addicts and if services were not improved then 'questions would have to be 
asked of local health boards'.

He attacked the jailing of addicts for short prison terms : 'Drug addicts 
going into prison and coming back out again is a waste of public money. It 
neither addresses their offending behaviour nor does it cut crime. It's 
purposeless ... We have our priorities wrong.' He added that he would like 
to see 'very, very, very many fewer' addicts going to prison.

He favours exploring the concept of ecstasy testing kits in clubs to reduce 
risk. He is unconvinced whether or not cannabis is a gateway drug, adding 
that the Executive was less concerned with people possessing illegal drugs 
than with them resorting to crime to feed their habit.

Backing David Blunkett's plan to downgrade the criminal classification of 
cannabis, he said: 'We need to concentrate on the most dangerous drugs and 
that is class-As such as heroin and cocaine. The reason for changing the 
classification of cannabis -- if we chose to -- is to send a clear message 
about priorities. It says to young people that we recognise that all drugs 
aren't the same.

'If we give messages that they are all bad then we will not be believed. 
Young people say alcohol causes five times the deaths that drugs do. Last 
year there were 1500 deaths due to alcohol and 292 from drugs. From a 
criminal point of view young men drinking and becoming aggressive is a 
significant problem ... cannabis is not associated with aggression.'

Simpson said he looked on drug addiction as a health problem as well as a 
criminal one.

* * * * * * * * * * * *

'If We Spent Tens Of Millions Helping These Countries, We'd Stop Hundreds 
Of Millions Of Drugs'

Part One: The Battle To Stem The Drugs Tide

The ingenious tactics of drug dealers means that, despite their best 
efforts, customs officials intercept only 10% of all drugs smuggled into 
the UK.

THE 20-foot container of almonds made its way from Afghanistan to Iran 
where it made a short, but essential, stop-over. After a few days it was 
hitched onto the back of a truck before making its way by sea to 
Southampton, heading for Scotland.

Customs investigators suspected something was up when undercover 
intelligence officers looked through the shipping line's cargo details: why 
would anyone spend UKP 43 transporting a container of almonds all this way 
when the most it would sell for in the shops was around UKP 30?

The container was searched at the Southampton dockside -- nothing 
suspicious was found. Back at her HQ, one female officer still couldn't 
make sense of it. She decided to go back for one last look round, tipped 
out a bag of almonds, picked up a handful of the nuts and rolled them in 
her hand. Then she noticed that her fingers were stained yellow.

She had stumbled on thousands of tiny bags of heroin -- each one no more 
than an inch in surface area -- which had been taken to an underground 
factory in Iran to be disguised as almonds, even down to the pitting and 
pock-marks on their surface.

Customs discovered they had hauled in around 60kg of heroin. At a cost of 
UKP 75k a kilo, they were looking at drugs with a street value of UKP 4.5 
million.

Dave Clark and Mike Marsden -- who head customs' detection branch and 
investigations unit in Scotland -- are proud of busts like that, but they 
know that in their front line in the war against drugs they face an 
overwhelming battle against ever-more ingenious tactics. They estimate that 
customs seize around 10% of all the drugs that arrive in the UK. In recent 
years, around UKP 1.5 billion of class-A drugs have been seized -- that 
means at least another UKP 100bn worth have made their way into our cities.

Drugs are a global business worth around UKP 300bn a year, just a step down 
from banking -- you might as well, as one customs officer says, try to 
eradicate the insurance industry. Taken on that scale, it's easy to 
understand why Tony Blair has made drugs a number one national priority and 
told MI5 and MI6 to prioritise the fight against drugs.
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