Pubdate: Fri, 03 Sep 2004 Source: Business Day (South Africa) Copyright: 2004 Business Day. Contact: http://www.bday.co.za/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2925 Author: Steve Matthewson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) DRUGS SCANDAL AT TOP PE SCHOOL The police will investigate how a group of pupils at the prestigious Grey High School came into possession of a stash of dagga, in a case that has highlighted drug use at upmarket schools in Port Elizabeth. Superintendent Rodney Visser, the deputy area head of the police's organised crime unit, said yesterday his unit intended looking into the allegations of drug use and possible dealing at the school. No charges, however, have been laid against a Grade Eight Grey boy and several Grade Nine pupils who were found with the drug. It is not clear if the boys were dealing in the drug or merely using it. The school has confirmed the incident, but says an internal inquiry will be held before a decision is taken on whether to expel the pupils. The Grey revelations have raised concern at the SA National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, which says staff and parents at upmarket schools in the metro often resist drug awareness training and live in a state of denial. Many middle-class schools in the city prevented drug counsellors from addressing parents about the dangers of abuse and how to look for the signs, Sanca treatment co-ordinator Trixie Pereira said yesterday. Pereira said that, while Sanca usually had no trouble introducing its awareness programmes to pupils, getting through to parents - who were ultimately responsible for their children's behaviour - was more difficult. "Schools still have an attitude that 'it doesn't happen in our school' and when it does they try to sweep it under the carpet - especially the middle to upperclass and traditionally white schools. "Schools in lower-income areas like the northern suburbs are much more receptive (to education and prevention programmes) and readily agree to us giving talks to parents there," she said. Even where schools uncovered drug use and referred individual pupils to Sanca for counselling, the organisation encountered resistance from the school when it later tried to set up meetings with the general parent body. Sometimes Sanca did not even get a reply to its offers. When the organisation did get access to parents and persuaded a school to arrange a meeting, the response was very poor. "It's always the same group that turns up. You are selling the same old story to those who are interested. It is not very often we make contact with the parents, but those are the people who are responsible - - those are the ones we need to reach." She said, however, that Sanca had not yet approached Grey High specifically to speak to its parents. Wealthier parents did not take the drug risk seriously until their own children were found with drugs or addicted, and were often offended by the suggestion that they improve their own understanding of the problem. Around a quarter of the drug users who go on Sanca's counselling and "detox" programmes are aged between 10 and 19 years. Children from private and upmarket former Model C government schools have been referred to Sanca in recent years by schools and parents, in one recent case a 13-year-old from Grey Junior School. In terms of national education policy, schools must send pupils found in possession of drugs for counselling before contemplating expulsion. Supt Visser said the number of criminal cases at schools was "not alarming", but he noted that two of three recent dagga and mandrax cases in the metro involved elite institutions. While the use of hard drugs such as heroin had increased in the metro lately, school pupils were more likely to use dagga, mandrax and alcohol, according to Sanca and the police. Eastern Province Herald - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin