Pubdate: Sat, 2 Jan 1999 Source: Times, The (UK) Copyright: 1999 Times Newspapers Ltd Contact: http://www.the-times.co.uk/ Author: Victoria Fletcher and Ian Brodie Victoria Fletcher and Ian Brodie on why two national 'drug czars' are refusing to take the soft option. DRUG-TAKING BRITAIN IS 'WORST IN EUROPE' EU Nations Will Resist Calls For More Tolerance YOUNG Britons are much more likely to take drugs than any of their European neighbours, with "soft" drugs proving the most popular. A recent survey by the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs found that 35 per cent of British teenagers regularly took cannabis compared with 25.7 per cent in France and 21 per cent in Germany. The "recreational" drug Ecstasy has been tried by 9 per cent of young Britons but by only 2.8 per cent of Germans, 3.1 per cent of French and 1 per cent of Swedes. For the past decade, schools and politicians have struggled to find a successful approach to slow the increase in the number of young people taking drugs. Campaigners have divided between those arguing for a tough, straightforward message that all drugs are dangerous - typified by the "Just Say No" adverts - and those arguing that children need to be given more information to inform their decisions. Two years ago, the Government showed its commitment to tackle the drugs problem when it ploughed 1.6 million UK pounds into a range of innovative educational projects. In Bradford, local sports personalities worked with young people to discuss issues surrounding drugs, while in Newham, East London, a children's theatre group acted out situations involving drugs. However, Britain has become aware that the drugs education has so far not worked and that the problem is escalating. Exactly one year ago, the Prime Minister decided that the only way to co-ordinate drugs education was by appointing a drugs strategy co-ordinator. On January 4, 1998, Keith Hellawell took up the position with a mission to draw up a detailed and clear drugs education policy for schools. The British and American drugs co-ordinators are responsible for organising national drug control policy and have direct access to their heads of government. The American official, Barry McCaffrey, takes the same hard line as his British counterpart in saying there should be no distinction between hard and soft drugs. His spokesman, Bob Weiner, explained why yesterday. Marijuana, he said, cannot be called soft when it is second only to alcohol as a substance implicated in car crashes. Similarly, marijuana disrupts productivity in schools and the workplace. "Your drug czar is right in recognising the dangers of all illegal substances," Mr Weiner said. The two men have met and found themselves in agreement on this and many other topics in their fight against drug use. In the official American view, those in favour of legalising soft drugs always maintain that increased use is irrelevant. According to Mr McCaffrey, a no-nonsense retired general, it is the most important reason against legalisation. According to his staff, the point was proved in Alaska, which recriminalised marijuana after several years of reducing it to the level of a parking ticket. The switch was prompted by a surge in use and increases in traffic accidents and overdose cases taken to hospital emergency rooms, Mr Weiner said. - --- MAP posted-by: Patrick Henry