Pubdate: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 Source: Daily Telegraph (UK) Copyright: Telegraph Group Limited 2000 Contact: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Author: Richard Savill FUSS OVER LEAH BETTS 'BECAUSE SHE WAS PRETTY THE parents of Leah Betts, the ecstasy victim, yesterday criticised a drugs expert for suggesting her death received nationwide attention only because she was photogenic. Rowdy Yates, director of the Scottish Drugs Training Project, told a social science seminar at Stirling University that nobody would have heard of Miss Betts if she had been "fat and pimply". Dr Yates used the example to highlight his claim that the drugs policy of successive governments was "driven by the perceived need to respond to public outrage at the latest scandal". He said progress would not be made in the war against drug abuse until long-term funding was made available. Last night the girl's mother, Janet Betts, 51, a nurse, said: "Leah would have been extremely flattered to have been called photogenic but that is not the reason people took notice. If she had been fat and pimply I would have shouted just as loud. That is not the issue. "The issue is that she was a young girl with all her life before her and it was taken from her for such a stupid, damn reason. It was more the age she was and the circumstances. Parents at the time were beginning to get worried about ecstasy. Leah was the catalyst." Dr Yates, 49, whose organisation trains professional drug counsellors, said Miss Betts's death was highlighted because of the efforts of her parents. "She was a pretty teenager and there were good photographs of her. There was an added irony that her mother was peripherally involved in drugs education and her father was an ex-policeman. They were an articulate couple who felt they had something to say. "In that year, many, many more young people would have died from sniffing volatile solvents. We don't hear about them because it happens in socially-deprived estates where the parents are very often inarticulate and they don't have pretty pictures of their kids. These deaths are tragic, too, yet they are never addressed or responded to." Miss Betts died five years ago after swallowing an ecstasy tablet at her 18th birthday party. Her death prompted her parents to begin a crusade to warn other youngsters about the dangers of drugs. The couple recently moved to Scotland, where they have continued their campaign, giving talks at schools. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea