Pubdate: Sun, 9 Mar 2008
Source: Independent on Sunday (UK)
Copyright: Independent Newspapers Ltd.
Contact:  http://www.independent.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/208
Author: Paul Lashmar
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

THE GREAT CLASS A DRUGS SALE - HOW PRICES HAVE TUMBLED UNDER LABOUR

'Startling and Shocking' Figures Alarm Experts Who Say Cities Are 
Awash With Heroin and Cocaine

Street prices for class A drugs have halved since Labour came to 
power, dropping almost every year since 1997, government figures 
confirm. Newly released statistics show that heroin cost as little as 
UKP40 a gram in 2007, just over half the price it was 10 years ago. 
Cocaine was UKP45 a gram, down from UKP71.

The shadow home affairs minister, James Brokenshire, says the 
figures, released in the same week as a UN warning that governments 
need to do more to tackle international drug gangs, show "10 years of 
failure" of government drug policies. "The figures are startling and 
shocking and show the reality of drug use in Britain. It's an 
indictment of government strategy over the last decade. Sadly, there 
is not much prospect of improvement," he said.

Experts also describe the figures as "shocking". Professor Neil 
McKeganey, director of the Centre for Drug Misuse Research at the 
University of Glasgow, said the figures "show a very gloomy picture". 
"What worries me is [prices] could drop further as the cost of 
production and distribution is a small part of the cost," he said.

Kathy Gyngell, research fellow at the Centre for Policy Studies, 
said: "Addicts reported that in the Nineties UKP20 would get you 0.2 
of a gram of a class A drug. Now it will get you half a gram."

Harry Shapiro of DrugScope, an independent centre of expertise on 
drugs, said: "These figures confirm the information we have been 
publishing from our annual street survey of drug prices. We know that 
there is a lot of heroin about and the consumption of cocaine is going up."

The figures, the first set of official drug-price statistics over a 
10-year period, were released in a parliamentary answer to Humfrey 
Malins MP. "They confirm what those of us on the ground have known 
for a long while, that the streets of our cities are awash with 
heroin and cocaine," said Mr Malins, MP for Woking, who is also a 
leading Conservative thinker on drugs policy, as well as a judge.

"I see the people who are using these drugs come up in front of the 
courts, and the situation is not getting better," he said.

The Government has just released its much-heralded UK drugs strategy 
for the next 10 years, announcing that assets will be seized from 
drugs dealers on arrest, and that addicts who do not undertake 
rehabilitation will lose their incapacity benefit. Mr Brokenshire 
dismissed these measures as "gimmicks", saying: "Some of these 
supposed new policies already exist."

The Home Office urged caution in the reading of the figures, saying 
they are not definitive, do not reflect regional variations and take 
no account of drug purity. "Reductions in price may be associated 
with increased competition or reduced demand, not just increased 
availability," a spokesman said. "The relationship between drug 
prices and drug use is not straightforward."

The figures also raise serious issues about the effectiveness of 
border controls. Law enforcement sources say that the Serious 
Organised Crime Agency (Soca) and HM Revenue & Customs seizures of 
class A drugs entering the UK will be down for the fifth year running.

"Price is obviously dependent on demand and supply. There seems to be 
a big increase in supply for the price to keep dropping," Mr 
Brokenshire said. "We have been arguing for better policing of our borders."

Professor McKeganey said: "The figures indicate we need to ratchet up 
the interdiction of drugs coming into the country. It also raises 
questions about our policy towards Afghanistan and Colombia. We know 
where the vast majority of these drugs are coming from and yet seem 
unable to do anything about it."

Ms Gyngell added: "What has happened in the last 10 years or so, 
despite Home Office claims about... drug use declining or 
stabilising, is that the number of hard-drugs addicts has tripled 
while the street price of class A drugs has plummeted, confirmed by 
these government figures. The failure to control supply of drugs 
totally undermines treatment investment, which is running to half a 
billion a year."

The Home Office was adamant that the policy was effective. "In terms 
of whether enforcement works, our view is that it does and that it 
plays a vital role in tackling drugs alongside education, early 
prevention and treatment." 
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