Pubdate: Sun, 24 Mar 2002 Source: Sunday Telegraph (UK) Copyright: Telegraph Group Limited 2002 Contact: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/437 Author: Daniel Foggo Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) ADDICTS TURN 'GENTEEL' TUNBRIDGE WELLS INTO THE HEROIN CAPITAL OF KENT IT was once described by the historian Lord Macaulay as "one of the richest and highly civilised parts of the kingdom" with its "brilliant shops" and "luxury dwellings", where people would flock to sample the invigorating waters of its spa. Today, it is the object of an altogether less healthy pilgrimage. Heroin usage among the young people of Kent is increasing, threatening the sanctity of one of Britain's most definitively middle-class towns: "Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells" has been replaced by "Addicted of Tunbridge Wells". The change is not immediately apparent to the visitor. Outwardly its demeanour remains as resolutely conservative and elegant as ever. Behind the facades of the Georgian sandstone and half-timbered clapboard houses the denizens of Tunbridge Wells are, however, increasingly ill at ease. The insidious presence of heroin on its streets, and in the veins of the young people who use it, has begun to encroach upon the daily realities of even the most well-to-do residents. It was highlighted last week when Theresa Dodd, whose husband Charles is a retired solicitor, revealed how three of her four privately educated daughters had become addicts. One of them, Antonia, 30, has now kicked her habit. Her siblings Thomasina, 27, and Angelika, 21, are still struggling to deal with their addictions. They beg and borrow money to perpetuate a vice that has destroyed their health and brought them to the brink of suicide. They are not alone. Drug workers estimate that the town, population 60,000, is home to about 50 known hardcore heroin addicts. They need to feed their craving every day with a UKP10 bag or "fix". The knock-on for the rest of Tunbridge Wells comes in the methods employed to find this money. Some addicts, such as Angelika, beg for their pennies, sitting forlornly in the street. Others resort to more forceful means; anecdotally at least, street crime has risen. Dr Andrew Wilski, a consultant psychiatrist who deals with drug takers, lives with his wife and their five children aged three to 19 in a three-storey Victorian terrace house in one of town's most stylish enclaves, minutes from the main drag of shops. "All of my four older children have at some point been attacked by people on the street who wanted money," he said. "One was badly beaten in an assault. Another was threatened with being pushed under a car unless he produced money. "The atmosphere in the whole town has changed. There is something in the air which is not terribly attractive." Not all of those who use the drug are middle-class dropouts. Much of the problem emanates from the town's less salubrious corners, its council estates, such as the Sherwood Park complex, hidden away from the view of tourists and unmentioned in the guidebooks. "It is a very unattractive place and a lot of people just vegetate on drugs there," said Dr Wilski. An NHS drugs worker, who asked not to be named, said that heroin use has increased in line with the rise in its availability. "We have addicts here aged between 16 and 60 and the total number of addicts goes up gradually each year." Prosperous middle-class enclaves near Tunbridge Wells are also not immune to the creep of heroin addiction. Anton Derkacz, of the charity Kent Council on Addiction, said: "From the mid-1990s it became much more widely available. Now there are suppliers and users in every small town and village." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake