Pubdate: Sun, 03 Apr 2005
Source: Sunday Mail (UK)
Copyright: 2005 Daily Record and Sunday Mail Ltd.
Contact:  http://www.sundaymail.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2260
Author: Dennis Ellam
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

SMACK ALLEY

Scandal Of Street Where Junkies Dump 70 Needles a Day

AT 69, Josephine Rooney is a pleasant, respectable, retired lady - one of 
the few old faces left behind in a once-genteel street that is now a 
squalid and dangerous drugs ghetto.

A former airline bookings supervisor, Josephine is the driving force behind 
a residents' group demanding action to reclaim the area.

Astonishingly, she is also an angel of mercy who does her best to feed and 
comfort the hopeless heroin and crack addicts who knock on her door for help.

Nowadays Hartington Street in Derby is known as Smack Alley, but it was 
still prosperous and middle-class when Josephine moved here 20 years ago - 
a parade of grand three storey terraces just a few blocks away from the 
centre of Derby.

Then a "halfway house" hostel for homeless people and addicts on rehab 
opened at one end of the street, and one by one the old residents moved out.

In 10 years, the street's decline has been so rapid that out of 50 houses, 
only eight are now owner-occupied - the rest have been bought up by absent 
landlords and converted into cramped bedsits and flats. The last family 
left more than a year ago.

"It became too dangerous, as simple as that," said Josephine. "We were 
surrounded by addicts looking for drugs, and prostitutes looking to earn 
money for drugs, and dealers peddling drugs.

"There would be syringes out the front every morning. I would walk the kids 
to school, telling them 'Don't stare at anyone, just keep going straight 
ahead', and they were clinging on to me in fright. There was just no hope 
it was ever going to get better.

"Hartington Street has been turned into a dumping ground. You want to find 
the people that society tries to forget? Look around the back of this 
street... the council, the police, politicians... all seem content to leave 
things as they are. They're just happy to see the drug problem contained on 
our doorsteps."

But even though she leads the campaign against them, Josephine feels sorry 
for the addicts washed up here. She used to watch them foraging in bins for 
food and couldn't bear to see their plight.

Now she feeds them herself... handing out free sandwiches every day to 
junkies who knock at her door. No one, it seems, is turned away. Josephine 
spends &L&6 a day on loaves from her pension and savings.

When I called, one addict with no money for a fix, shaking all over from 
cold turkey symptoms, hadbeen violently sick in her bathroom. Downstairs, a 
19-year-old cannabis smoker was saying he has now tried heroin but is 
determined, he vows, with tears shining in his eyes, to keep himself off 
the habit.

Why? Because his dad was a junkie. He went back home one day last August to 
find his father lying on the sofa, lifeless and blue, with the needle still 
in his arm, and a massive overdose in his veins.

"Not me, please not me, I don't want to go that way," he says.

In the last two years there have been four drug deaths in Hartington 
Street. "They tell me I'm crazy, to be supporting the very people we're 
trying to get out," says Josephine. "But they're victims like us. You can't 
help but feel sorry for them.

"I don't want them here, but as long as they are here then they need help - 
and when you give help, then you can't judge them."

One of the people she refuses to judge is Anthony Gilmour. As he shoots up 
a needleful of heroin in a filth-infested back yard, he admits it's a 
squalid way to live - and will be a squalid way to die.

"It's killing me and I know it," says Anthony, 39, when the drug has done 
its trick and the sweats and shivering ease enough to let him speak. "Might 
be tomorrow, might be next year, but it's coming and it won't be long. I'm 
a dead man."

Along Smack Alley, there are plenty more like him. Hollow-faced, 
sallow-skinned, ravaged young people made old before their time.

In one small corner behind No 40, where Anthony goes twice a day to inject, 
I counted at least 30 bloodied, discarded syringes. In another there were 
40 more - that's 70 a day. Some were stuck into cavities in the brick wall 
- - a thoughtful act by a junkie to keep them away from small children, says 
Anthony.

Every few days, the city council's Needle Squad take away sackfuls of 300 
or 400 at a time.

The local action group - or what's left of it - have lobbied politicians, 
councillors, officials, you name it, but there are no promises, no action.

Tony Blair's office passed a letter to John Prescott's, who never replied. 
 From Tory leader Michael Howard, only silence. Local MP Margaret Beckett 
sent a bland note about ASBOs. The best they have heard is a vague 
suggestion from the city council, that it might try to halt any more houses 
being converted into flats.

"Too late, too late," says Josephine. "We're already on the way to 
destruction. We have been left to fend for ourselves - normal rules of law 
and order don't exist here."

At the opposite end of Hartington Street, 80-year-old Mary Beadsmore has 
lived in the same house for 70 years.

She was there as a girl, as a wife and mum of two, and now as a widow with 
her photos of the place in happier days.

The roses she and her late husband Robert planted in their tiny front 
garden in 1978 will bloom again soon, she says.

She still tends them lovingly... pruning, clipping, and every so often 
picking out the used needles casually tossed around them.

HEROIN.. THE FACTS

- -A MILLION people are regular users of heroin and cocaine in the UK.

- -DRUG-RELATED crime costs the UK taxpayer at least UKP20billion a year.

- -THE UK heroin industry is worth more than UKP2.3billion a year.

- -A "WRAP" of heroin can be bought for as little as &L&5.

- -AROUND 90 per cent of the UK's heroin comes from Afghanistan.

- -OPERATION Crackdown has led to around 2,000 arrests and up to 100 kilos of 
heroin and cocaine have been seized.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager