Pubdate: Mon, 29 May 2006
Source: Times, The (UK)
Copyright: 2006 Times Newspapers Ltd
Contact:  http://www.the-times.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/454
Author: Rachel Campbell-Johnston
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

GIVE THEM ALL THE CRACK THEY WANT

Drug Laws Are Failing Both Society and the Addicts. It's Time for a 
Radical Solution

DRUGS CAN BE FUN. There are only two problems. They  ruin your life.
And they ruin the life of everyone  around you. And I don't just mean
that coke-head who  assaults you with his monologue. I mean homes
smashed  apart by robberies and broken promises. I mean entire  worlds
demolished by violence and distrust.

Drugs may have been part of our culture since  prehistoric man first
experimented with psycho-active  plants, but they present an
intractable problem to  modern society. And government policy clearly
can't  cope.

Millions of pounds may be spent on policing the drugs  industry from
the poppy fields of Pashtun farmers to  Old Compton Street, but I
could still wander out of my  front door right now and score within
minutes. All  right, it would probably turn out to be talcum powder.
I could probably sue under the Trade Descriptions Act,  but still,
right here in Soho, in the heart of London,  where the electronic
surveillance systems are among the  most sophisticated in Britain, an
illegal trade thrives  -- and with it, crime.

The light of morning bears testimony: the stolen purses  discarded in
gutters, the last gangs of stragglers  squaring-up in the streets, the
pools of blood clotting  in alleyways, the fluttering cordons of
police  crime-scene tape. And this is not just Soho. The same  scenes
are witnessed in town centres throughout the  country. According to a
recent BBC survey, almost three  quarters of Britons consider drugs to
be a problem in  their area. Something has to give.

A report has just been published by the Independent  Working Group, an
advisory panel of experts from the  police and the legal and health
sectors. It suggests  that Britain should consider a proposal already
in  action in eight other countries. This involves the  creation of
drug consumption rooms -- "shooting  galleries", as they are nicknamed
- -- to which addicts  can come for free needles, for medical support
and even  for companionship. There is no evidence that it  decreases
crime, the chairman, Dame Ruth Runciman,  says, but it might at least
help to prevent the spread  of hepatitis and Aids. And it brings one
of the most  marginalised groups into touch with social services,
often for the first time.

The idea has the support of senior police officers,  including Andy
Hayman, the chair of the Association of  Chief Police Officers Drugs
Committee. David Cameron,  the Conservative leader, has declared that
his party  would not rule it out. The present system of directing
drug users into treatment was not working as well as it  could, he
said. "We should look at it as part of our  policy review."

Of course, many are outraged. "An obnoxious proposal by  a committee
of do-gooders" was the opinion from  Civitas, the institute for the
study of civil society.  Many join them in deploring an encouragement
to further  drug use. Yet the real problem with the proposal is  that
it does not go far enough. These "shooting  galleries" should offer
not just free needles but free  drugs.

Would that increase abuse? Not necessarily. Alcohol is  freely
available and heavily advertised and we are not  all alcoholics.
Legalisation might even have a  beneficial effect. Would those first
snorts of cocaine  seem so temptingly salacious if they were not
forbidden? Would Pete Doherty have been voted a "rock  hero" by NME
readers if he was stripped of his  rebelliousness and revealed as the
wilful loser he  really is? Scampi would probably taste better if it
were a banned substance.

Drug addiction has a natural life cycle. You start  taking drugs
because they make you feel better. But the  heartbreaking pleasure is
soon replaced by a washed-up  desperation. The heroin that wrapped a
dark stole round  your skull becomes a marauding compulsion that
ravages  your nerves. The crack cocaine that led you soaring  through
the sky-lights leaves you empty and fragile.

You are trapped in a cycle of fast diminishing returns.  You chase
that first feeling like you chase the first  sweet memories of love.
But you can never recapture it.  You can go only onwards and downwards
into sad  isolation. Soon you need your first shot just to make  you
brush your teeth in the morning. The embrace of the  angels has turned
into the sneer of a devil. Drugs  promise freedom, but they imprison
you in compulsion.  You set out open-armed to experience. You end with
your  whole life narrowed down to one repetitive experience.  The
entire world is focused on to a needle point. You  feed like a vampire
on your own veins. But every time  you shoot up, as a friend of mine
put it, you are  shooting up your own tears. You crave for release.

No one can give up until they reach this point. It is  no use clapping
some offender into prison at vast state  expense. But to supply the
addict with drugs is to  force the endgame. You can't maunder on for
decades  with heroin or crack cocaine. You go down fast. You  either
die of an overdose. or you are brought to your  knees. And it is only
from your knees that you can beg  for help.

This is when the State should step in, offering  withdrawal programmes
and counselling, paid for with  the money that it has saved from
policing the drugs  industry. And there is also Narcotics Anonymous, a
true  model of democracy, with a network extending throughout
Britain. It asks for no fees, no leadership, no dues.  No one forces
you to join. You can walk out if you  like. But people go because they
want to go. They go  for support.

That is why, if you have compassion for the drug  addict, you should
give him more crack. 
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake