Pubdate: Mon, 13 May 2002 Source: Scotsman (UK) Copyright: The Scotsman Publications Ltd 2002 Contact: http://www.scotsman.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/406 Authors: Dan McDougall and Andrew Denholm DRUGS FLOOD IN AS CUSTOMS CUTS LEAVE COAST UNGUARDED IT stretches for more than 4,000 miles from Eyemouth in the south-east to Annan in the south-west, with thousands of coves and inlets cutting into the twists and turns in between. Scotland's coastline has been described in the past as a smuggler's paradise. Now critics are claiming that its often remote and uninhabited coastline is becoming even more of an easy target for international drug traffickers. Senior customs officials say criminals are seeing Scottish beaches and ports as a "soft touch" following the restructuring of the service since 1996. Officials accuse the Government of focusing too much on breaking down traditional trafficking routes through England at Scotland's expense. Today, a map compiled by The Scotsman outlines the full extent of Scotland's frontline coastal defences against some of Europe's biggest drug smugglers as the Government's once widespread customs intelligence network lies alarmingly exposed - decimated by sweeping financial cutbacks. The closures stretch from Newton Stewart and Ardrossan in the south-west around the coast to Ullapool, Wick, Peterhead, Fraserburgh - and Kirkcaldy and Grangemouth in the east. They also highlight bases on some of Scotland's islands - including Islay, Skye and Orkney - as places where cover has been pulled. Ironically, Jim Wallace, Scottish justice minister and the man responsible for fighting the drugs scourge, has complained about cutbacks in customs and excise bases - including the closure of a post in Kirkwall in his Orkney constituency. In 1998, as Scottish Liberal Democrat leader, Mr Wallace warned that closing the base at Oban would be a "charter for drug smugglers". His fears were reinforced at the time by former Provo and police informer Martin McGartland, who said it would invite gangs to smuggle at will. McGartland, who survived an IRA assassination attempt on his life, said: "It is safe and easy to move drugs and guns around the west coast." On Thursday this week, a Parliamentary Select Committee on Scottish Affairs, chaired by Paisley MP Irene Adams, will reveal the results of its study into the effectiveness of Scotland's current customs and excise operation. Sources have indicated to The Scotsman that the report will make uncomfortable reading for those who have presided over the changes to customs operations. The study was prompted by rising concerns about the increase in cigarette and drug smuggling operations and is expected to voice concern over current arrangements and call for more officers to be placed at key locations around Scotland's coastline. Unions representing customs officers are concerned that hundreds of uniformed officers have been made redundant or redeployed in recent years to concentrate the anti-drugs fight at airports and the larger ports. This has left almost 95 per cent of Scotland's harbours without a uniformed customs presence, with the majority of officers now stationed at in-land offices often hundreds of miles from the remote bays and sea inlets they are charged with monitoring. Yet, according to the latest figures from the National Criminal Intelligence Service, major traffickers are continuing the flow of narcotics into Scotland's towns and cities. The number of drug seizures rose nearly four-fold between 1985 and 1995 and increased by a further 40 per cent by 1998. However, there was a fall of 4.9 per cent in Scotland in 1999, which some critics claim is down to the restructuring of the customs service. In Glasgow and Edinburgh today, the street price for a gramme of cocaine is lower than ever. Cigarette smuggling, north and south of the border also continues to rise, and last year the trade in illegal tobacco cost taxpayers ?3.5 billion. The Public and Commercial Services Union, which represents Customs officers, said Scotland's coastline remained a magnet for smugglers - and questioned the growing concentration on English routes. Bill Johnstone, Scottish spokesman for the PCSU, said: "The reality is drug and cigarette smugglers are continuing to widely use the western islands and harbours around the East coast of Scotland to bring in their early trade - you only have to look at the very serious heroin problem places like Fraserburgh and Peterhead have." The face of Scotland's anti-smuggling customs operation changed dramatically in the early 1990s after the Conservative government decided that basing customs officers at remote coastline stations was no longer part of a viable strategy to help win the war against increasingly sophisticated smugglers. The nationwide theory was simple - a hi-tech, intelligence-based service was needed to stay one step ahead of the drug traffickers and arms dealers. Instead of ground-based intelligence at remote harbours and sea inlets, customs resources would be "brigaded" from main offices and reaction forces would be created to deal with trouble spots. The result was the loss of hundreds of jobs and the closure of customs and excise offices around the UK, with Scotland bearing the heaviest burden of all with the eventual closure of more than 20 customs stations dotted around the coastline. The majority of Scotland's Customs officers are now based at command centres in Aberdeen, Shetland, Dundee, Edinburgh and Paisley. A further 150 customs staff are also based at Scotland's airports. Despite the evidence, HM Customs insists the new strategy is effective - and that it was right to focus on "the major ports like Liverpool and Dover where we believe most of the bulk smuggling is done". Yet officers on the ground continue to claim local knowledge gained by permanently-based officers would give intelligence gatherers vital information on local shipping movements - and save officers valuable time in critical situations. - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel