Pubdate: Sat, 28 Mar 1998
Source: Independent, The (UK)
Contact:  1 Canada Square, Canary Wharf, London E14 5DL, England
Website: http://www.independent.co.uk/
Author: Rosa Prince

YOUNGSTERS ASK DRUG TSAR: HAVE YOU BEEN A USER?

Young people yesterday asked the government drug tsar Keith Hellawell
whether he had ever taken drugs.

The question to Mr Hellawell and his deputy, Mike Trace, came at a
consultation forum for young people at the Ministry of Sound nightclub in
south London. Mr Trace, a former outreach worker with drug users, said he
had partaken in the past, although he did not disclose which drugs; Mr
Hellawell said he had not.

Mr Hellawell and Mr Trace were quizzed by 80 young people aged 15 to 25 who
had travelled from as far away as Newcastle and Cornwall to attend the
meeting, which was organised by the National Youth Agency.

Emma Gosling, a 20-year-old from Reading, said she had used most drugs. "I
think cannabis should be decriminalised and then the public should be
educated before the rest are legalised," she said.

She was not confident her views would be listened to: "They ought to listen
to us," she said. "We are the young people, we will be running the country
in 20 years' time. Today ought to make a difference but I doubt it will."

In response to Ms Gosling's question "what gives you the right to tell me
what to do", Mr Hellawell said: "I don't think you have to have had
experience of drugs to do my job. If you follow that argument doctors could
only treat people whose illnesses they have experienced."

Christopher Flockhart, 17, from Newark, said he did not think drugs should
be legalised. "If it is for medical purposes then I'm OK about it, but hard
drugs can kill people," she said.

Matt Broadbent, a 19-year-old from Brighton, asked Mr Hellawell how he
justified making natural drugs, such as cannabis and magic mushrooms,
illegal.

Christine Widdowfield, 23, from Middlesbrough, said she had seen friends
become heroin addicts. "There should be more outreach workers," she said.
"They should educate people more. I hope we will be listened to."

Mr Trace said it was important to show young people that their views were
taken seriously. "When I was young nothing would reassure me that I was
being listened to," he said. "In the end government is government - they
are men in suits. But we don't have to do things like this. We're trying to
show people we're willing to talk."