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 Author: Dan McDougall and Andrew Denholm SCOTLAND LEFT WIDE OPEN TO DRUGS POLITICIANS are to press for a review of controversial changes to customs and excise services in Scotland - as senior officials claimed its coastline had become a "soft touch" for smugglers. The Scotsman understands that a report by a Westminster select committee this week will voice serious concerns over surveillance and security along beaches and remote harbours, particularly in the north-east and west. Members of the Scottish affairs committee may also call for a further investigation to assess whether the number of officers at key points along the coastline should to be increased. Last night, senior customs officials said the government's decision to move officers away from remote Scottish ports and concentrate resources on Liverpool, London and the south-east of England had allowed a flood of drugs to enter Britain along Scottish shores. The Public and Commercial Services Union (PCSU), which represents Scottish customs officers, claimed about 500 uniformed officers have been made redundant or relocated from Scotland's shorelines in the past five years. The union called on ministers to put in place a high-profile customs presence around the Scottish coastline - a third of the UK's whole - as a matter of urgency. Opposition politicians called on the government to bolster Scotland's customs force in an effort to halt the flood of drugs entering the country. Mounting criticism of the government's strategy comes as research conducted by The Scotsman highlights the full extent of the problem. Our study found almost 95 per cent of Scottish harbours are now without a uniformed customs presence. Yet the latest figures from the National Criminal Intelligence Service indicate major traffickers are continuing to bring their cargoes through Sco tland. The number of drug seizures rose nearly four-fold between 1985 and 1995 and had 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 was a result of the restructuring of the customs service. Bill Johnstone, a spokesman for the PCSU, said Scotland was being seen as an "easy touch" by drug smugglers. He said: "There are no full-time customs officers in over 90 per cent of Scotland's harbours and small ports. At the same time, we have a lot of intelligence that suggests that Scotland is regarded as an easy touch for smugglers, particularly given the lack of permanent uniformed customs officers in remote Highland harbours. "Scotland's 4,000 miles of coastline have always been a haven for smugglers, but the government continues to insist all of the drugs coming into Scotland are coming in through Liverpool and London." Roseanna Cunningham, the Scottish National Party's justice spokeswoman, echoed the concerns, calling for staffing to be bolstered immediately. She said: "We know drugs come into Britain through Scotland because cases of drugs are often washed up on our beaches. Drug dealers are the ultimate opportunists and it would be ridiculous to suggest that they are ignoring the possibilities afforded by secluded beaches which are currently untended. We need more bodies on the ground in Scotland immediately to prevent this flow of drugs from getting out of hand." However, Phil Rogers, a spokesman for HM Customs, insisted the strategy to centralise operations, begun in 1996 under the Conservative government, was effective. He said: "We maintain the belief that small harbour and coastal offices do not offer us the best use for our current resources. We also don't accept that major traffickers are using remote Scottish harbours to bring drugs into Scotland, because our intelligence suggests otherwise. "The amount of seizures police are making on the roads from London and Liverpool backs this up." According to recent figures, customs has 150 detection officers in Scotland specialising in the seizure of smuggled goods and 130 intelligence officers for drug and cigarette trafficking. The majority of these officers are now based in Aberdeen, Shetland, Dundee, Edinburgh and Paisley. - --- MAP posted-by: Alex