Pubdate: Wed, 16 Jan 2002 Source: Edinburgh Evening News (UK) Copyright: 2002 The Scotsman Publications Ltd Contact: http://www.edinburghnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1626 Author: Margo MacDonald, MSP Note: Margo MacDonald is a Member of the Scottish Parliament for the Scottish Nationalist Party IT'S TIME FOR PLAIN DEALING ON DRUGS Do you think this new fashion for telling it like it is amongst Tony's cronies could catch on? First there was Foreign Office minister Peter Hain, who's supposed to be subtly promoting the Blair line on the EU gravy-train, going off the tracks and admitting that British railways are the worst in Europe. Then there was Lord Barnett, the peer formerly known as Joel, the Treasury Minister who produced the financial formula, or carve-up, which bears his name. He said the job of Secretary of State for Scotland was redundant. Is it hoping for too much, do you think, to open the paper each morning and search for a similar true story on the Government's policy on drug use and abuse? Probably, because too many prominent politicians would have to eat their words if the Home Secretary or the Health Secretary admitted that Labour's drugs policies have failed. Just as the railways are now seen to be providing the worst service in Europe, so Britain has the worst record on dealing with drug use. The figures on drug-related crime continue to rise, prisons are rife with all sorts of drugs, deaths from overdoses are much higher than in continental Europe, and the age at which drugs are first used is lower than in neighbouring countries. Yet the Government's strategy on drug use is confused or secret, or both. What is the intention in spending millions on Drugs Action Areas, on support groups, self-help groups, school education programmes, TV public service advertising, rehabilitation units and publicly-funded organisations like Scotland Against Drugs? Is the aim to obliterate all drug use, including alcohol and tobacco, or is there a level of tolerable drug use, once again including booze and baccy? One thing's become more obvious since poor Prince Hal's admission of being a regular sort of guy. It's not only young people who judge booze to be a bigger danger to the achievement of health and happiness. The reaction to the news of the young prince's drinking and cannabis use has shown that parents are more concerned about the effects of drink. As you'd expect from this government of cutting-edge thinkers, now that there's less possibility of a parents' revolt at the polls should cannabis be re-classified, David Blunkett has led from behind . . . and placed responsibility on the police officer on the beat for determining whether someone caught in possession of cannabis should be cautioned, and have his or her supply confiscated, or arrested and charged with having the intent to supply others. Emboldened by this piece of buck-passing, the Home Secretary is now reported to be open to the suggestion by the Association of Senior Police Officers in England and Wales that people caught in possession of heroin, cocaine and Ecstasy should not be prosecuted as at present, but should be given the option of rehabilitative treatment. So far, so nearly good. The two weak points are firstly, that it's a bad move to make police officers act as judge and jury or decide who should be charged, and who should walk free. Secondly, even though imprisonment is unsuitable, there aren't nearly enough treatment centres to cope with people who would be jailed under the present policy. Drug classification is a power that's reserved for Westminster, but policing and health policies are the responsibility of the Scottish Parliament. Through political cowardice, Westminster probably won't reclassify any drugs apart from cannabis, if that. The result of that will be to prolong the strategy-free limbo of the present laws on drug use. I'm still trying to persuade my fellow MSPs to have a commission set up by the parliament to investigate drug use in Scotland so that we can agree on some strategic aims against which the millions spent on combating drugs could be measured. Without knowing why Prince Harry, or the vast majority of the teenagers in our own families, don't progress to hard drugs, and in most cases, stop using drugs other than alcohol, it's impossible to construct a workable policy for coping with drugs, to avoid the law looking like an ass and the rest of we social drug-takers looking like hypocrites. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth