Pubdate: Tue, 21 May 2002 Source: Independent (UK) Copyright: 2002 Independent Newspapers (UK) Ltd. Contact: http://www.independent.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/209 Author: Cahal Milmo Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) WHY RACHEL'S PARENTS HOPE HER TERRIBLE DEATH CAN LEAD TO MORE ENLIGHTENED ATTITUDES TO DRUGS Froukje, a heroin addict in Amsterdam for 19 years, took a long look at the pictures of Rachel Whitear's bloated and blackened body, bent double by the craving for smack that sent her to a grim and premature death. Like millions of others who have seen the pictures of 21-year-old Rachel since they were released by her parents, Pauline and Mick Holcroft, the 39-year-old Dutch woman agreed they were shocking. But as the Holcrofts stood with Froukje at a drop-in centre in Amsterdam earlier this month, it dawned that her shock was not just at the images but the circumstances that led to the Briton's lonely death. For months before Rachel's body was found in the Devon flat where she died, clutching the syringe she had used to inject her last UKP10 heroin hit, her parents had tried to get her on a treatment programme. They were told there was a waiting list of six to nine months. Rachel, a bright and promising former psychology undergraduate before trying heroin, was dead before she reached the top of it. Froukje told the Holcrofts that she managed both her addiction and a job with the help of therapy available at 48 hours' notice - the standard waiting time in the Netherlands. She said: "We're much better off. We have [heroin substitute] methadone programmes. You don't have to wait. "I think in the UK you have to wait nine months before you can get any help. That's unthinkable for us to have to wait that long. Because when people want to kick the habit, they want it now." It is a way of thinking that Pauline, 52, the manager of a residential care estate, and Mick, 54, a leisure centre worker, have come not only to recognise but to champion. Rather than two more grieving casualties of Britain's burgeoning drug problem, the couple have been transformed into the unlikely vanguard of a radical overhaul of drug education and prevention. The Government's announcement today that it will use Rachel's Story - a hard-hitting drug education video made with the Holcrofts' help and featuring the photographs of her body - to warn children of the dangers of addiction is just the latest stage in the couple's "voyage of discovery" into addiction and its social fall-out. Speaking after their visit to the Netherlands to see its treatment of cannabis and heroin, Pauline said: "We have got to accept the reality that drugs are rife in Britain and we aren't going to get rid of them. "We haven't done much in this country that is radical for a very long time and they are not going to go away. It is time for radical thinking. Holland has confronted its problem. So must we." The Holcrofts found themselves thrust into the public spotlight three months ago after Rachel lost her battle against what she called her "rage" in grotesque circumstances in Exmouth on 10 May 2000. A day after breaking up with the boyfriend who police believed got her hooked on heroin at the age of 19 and telling her parents that she was coming home, she went to buy one last dose of heroin. After beginning to wean herself off the drug, her tolerance was unusually low. Fate would have it that the heroin in the paper wrap she bought was unusually pure. Her prone body was found three days later. Like Paul and Jan Betts, who published a photograph of their daughter Leah dying from an ecstasy pill in 1995, the decision of the Holcrofts to show their daughter's corpse caused widespread shock. The Holcrofts, who brought up Rachel in the family home in Withington, Herefordshire, wanted that initial "fright factor". Now they want their daughter's death to be part of a more enlightened battle against drugs. The House of Commons Home Affairs Select Committee is expected to recommend this week a network of "safe injecting areas" where Britain's 240,000 addicts can inject a form of heroin prescribed on the NHS. It will also suggest that rather than jailing them, addicts should be offered treatment to change their lifestyles to help counter a drug culture which means that Britain accounts for nearly 40 per cent of the 7,000 annual drugs deaths in the entire EU. The shift from punitive to preventative drug policies will be the most radical in 30 years. The suggestions are ones that the Holcrofts, previously opposed to any form of legalisation, wholeheartedly agree with after their visit to the Amsterdam drop-in centre and one of the city's famous cannabis cafes. Pauline said: "I didn't expect to be saying this. Initially, when we knew what was going on with Rachel, I would have been anti any drugs - I would have been the person who said 'don't legalise anything'. "I have changed my views. I think there is this terrible reality that in this country there are so many young cannabis users and because it is illegal here, they go on to try harder drugs through the dealers." Research shows that whereas 40 per cent of teenagers use cannabis in Britain, where it is an illegal Class B drug, the figure in the Netherlands, where it is sold openly, is 20 per cent. The fact that one in every 50 youngsters in Britain goes on to try heroin, compared with one in a thousand Dutch youngsters, proves that legalisation of cannabis would cut the link to hard drug dealers, the Holcrofts believe. Rachel, who wrote of her addiction "it's destroying me - my house, my job, my relationship with my family", initially experimented with cannabis and ecstasy, according to her parents. Her stepfather told ITV's Central News, which followed the couple on their visit to Amsterdam: "In Britain, the dealers have cannabis in one pocket and heroin in the other. "There are far, far fewer heroin addicts in Holland, so Rachel would have been less likely to fall into those circles. And if she had had problems, she would have got help more or less immediately, which isn't available in Britain." The couple modestly underline that they are not experts on drugs policy. Instead, they base their calls for a Dutch-style overhaul of policy on their daughter. Pauline, who understandably bristles at the term "shooting gallery" for an injecting clinic, said: "My experience is based on what happened to Rachel. "Either we don't set up clinics and addicts will still buy heroin on the streets, take it in unsafe conditions and die - as my daughter did. Under supervision, at least those risks are removed. It would save lives." The couple oppose criticism from traditionalists that earlier education, wider treatment, legalisation of cannabis and NHS prescription of heroin represent defeat in attempts to stop the inexorable rise in addiction and related crime. Instead, like Britain's biggest addiction charity, DrugScope, and, increasingly, senior government ministers, they believe it is opening a long-neglected second front in the much-ridiculed war on drugs. The fact that their daughter's corpse, clad in a summer dress, will now be shown to wide-eyed nine-year-olds is a necessary ratcheting up of the campaign to stop others suffering the same fate, according to Mick. He said: "I have grandchildren. This is to provide children with the facts why, when someone says one day, 'Hey, do you want to try this?', they know what they're talking about when they reject it. "It's about, if they do try it, them having treatment rapidly available to stop them falling into crime. It's about providing the structure that wasn't there for Rachel, her family and so many others." Campaigning Parents The Battle Against Drugs Leah Betts: Paul and Jan Betts, the parents of sixth-former Leah, who died after taking an ecstasy tablet on her 18th birthday in 1995, became national figures when they published a photograph of their daughter as she lay dying in hospital. They have maintained a hard line against legalisation and reject the Dutch model for dealing with drugs. Amy Pickard: The heavily pregnant 17-year-old fell into a heroin-induced coma after taking an overdose in a public lavatory in Hastings last summer. Her baby died five days after being delivered. Amy's mother, Thelma, a nurse, issued a photograph of her comatose daughter and is campaigning for the ban on all drugs to be upheld. Scott Gillespie: Fulton Gillespie, a retired journalist, told the Home Affairs Select Committee to legalise drugs earlier this year after his 33-year-old son injected himself with contaminated heroin. The product of a loving, affluent family, he had dabbled with drugs at school and fallen into heroin addiction. His father said: "Control of this power station has to be taken away from the criminals." Lorna Spinks The family of the 19-year-old student launched a nationwide poster campaign when she died after taking a "super-strong" ecstasy pill in May last year. The billboards, funded by donations from poster site firms, showed a selection of ecstasy pills with the legend: "Which one's the killer?" - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel