Pubdate: Mon, 14 Jul 2003
Source: Taipei Times, The (Taiwan)
Copyright: 2003 The Taipei Times
Contact:  http://www.taipeitimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1553
Author: Stephen Khan, The Observer

YESTERDAY'S DRUG MAKES COMEBACK AMONG UK YOUTH

With Afghanistan Producing Bumper Opium Crops, Heroin Is Cheaper Than
Ever, Giving Young People A Potent Hard-Drug Alternative

"Usually we'll go to a mate's house, but we have had the odd smoke in the 
park. It's the feeling. The world just fades away. Folk who spike their 
veins go mad. They lose it. Having a smoke now and then is different."

Keith, a 22-year-old student

Heroin was seen as yesterday's drug -- the preserve of aging junkies and 
social dropouts. But wrinkled pieces of scorched kitchen foil discarded in 
city alleyways tell a different story. Heroin is back in the UK and it's 
coming out of the nation's deprived housing projects.

Bumper crops in Afghanistan have made the drug cheaper than ever. Just 
(US$8.15) will buy enough to keep a smoker in a state of euphoria for 
hours. Puffing the heated white powder -- "chasing the dragon" -- is the 
delivery method for the new heroin takers, who see syringes as dirty and 
dangerous.

Despite the removal of the Taliban regime and Western governments' promises 
to end the dominance of the opium crop, Afghanistan produced 3,400 tonnes 
last year. That was its biggest-ever harvest -- up 700 tonnes on 2001 -- 
and returns it to the top of the world league of heroin producers.

The ripple effect has led to lower prices on the streets. When eyes are on 
cocaine and crack cocaine, heroin offers a bargain-basement, hard-drug 
alternative.

Students and the working young wishing to dabble are prepared to venture 
into the sink housing projects to secure their supply.

"I just go up to the shop, buy the stuff and get out of there," said 
22-year-old student Keith, describing an empty flat in an area of Glasgow 
that is a heroin outlet.

"I'll meet up with some friends and we'll smoke. Usually we'll go to a 
mate's house, but we have had the odd smoke in the park. It's the feeling. 
The world just fades away," he said.

Yet he said he would not consider injecting.

"Folk who spike their veins go mad. They lose it. Having a smoke now and 
then is different," he said.

Scotland's largest city has long been regarded as the heroin capital of the 
UK. At least 15,000 addicts -- 3.1 percent of the population aged between 
15 and 54 -- live in the greater Glasgow area and spend more than 60 
million (US$260.78 million) a year on their drug habits, largely funded by 
crime. Of the 300 people who died through drug overdoses in Scotland last 
year, the vast majority were in Glasgow.

The UK has the fastest-growing number of heroin addicts of any country in 
Europe. The total amount of heroin seized last year was almost a third more 
than the amount of cocaine seized.

A spokesperson for the charity Drugscope told The Observer that pockets of 
increased heroin usage were springing up in parts of the country suffering 
from economic depression.

Danny Kushlick from Transform, which campaigns on issues of drug policy, 
added: "Patterns of usage change according to local fashions.

"While an increase may be linked to higher availability, it can also be 
down to a few `cool' people who begin using locally and encourage others to 
do the same."

Academic studies have shown pre-teens are now experimenting with heroin.

"We asked drug-using 11 and 12-year-olds in Scotland if they had tried some 
form of heroin. Between 5 and 6 percent of them said yes. Five years ago 
the percentage would have been zero," said Neil McKeganey of the University 
of Glasgow.

This stark outlook has prompted a hardline response. Newspaper campaigns 
and demonstrations aimed at clamping down on dealers have proved popular.

A US-style Drug Enforcement Agency was launched to tackle the problem. The 
agency announced last week that it had hauled US$89.64 million-worth of 
drugs off Scotland's streets last year -- five times more than in the 
previous year.

However, campaigners claim substance abuse is as widespread as ever, 
despite the war on drugs. Gail McCann, who set up the action group Mothers 
Against Drugs, said: "An indication that the clampdown was cutting supplies 
would be an increase in the price of heroin, but we have seen no sign of 
that. Kids are going out and buying bags of this stuff for US$8. A decade 
ago they would have had to have spent at least double that. Heroin is the 
number one threat to lives in the west of Scotland."

The availability of hard drugs shocks Mary McClelland, a mother with a 
stark warning for those who think smoking or snorting is safe.

"Heroin is highly addictive," she said. "When it is smoked, the effects are 
felt in seconds, but wear off quickly. Smoking repeatedly can lead to 
increased tolerance and addicted users need a constant supply of heroin 
just to feel normal. Before they know what, they're injecting."

McClelland's son, Christopher, should have been 28 next week. He died of a 
heroin overdose five years ago.
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