Pubdate: Fri, 06 Feb 2004 Source: Scotsman (UK) Copyright: The Scotsman Publications Ltd 2004 Contact: http://www.scotsman.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/406 Author: Nick Allen, Crime Correspondent, PA News Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n230/a06.html?9134 POLICE CHIEF SLAMS COLLEAGUE OVER HEROIN CALL A police chief's suggestion that heroin should be sold legally on the street was today condemned as "dangerous and divisive" by another of the country's most senior officers. Controversial North Wales Chief Constable Richard Brunstrom's call for the drug to be legalised was publicly slammed by Tarique Ghaffur, Assistant Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, who has responsibility for drug enforcement in London. The intervention by Mr Ghaffur reveals the depth of anger among other senior officers over Mr Brunstrom's remarks. Mr Ghaffur said heroin was "evil" and any suggestion that it should be legalised undermined the work of his officers trying to stamp it out. He said: "The evil consequences of the heroin trade have permeated every level of our society. "Not only does this drug wreck people's lives and that of their families, it also destroys communities and it has to be stamped out now. "London has a hugely diverse population with some of the most vulnerable communities in Britain which are already suffering the consequences of the heroin trade. "We in the Met are robustly committed to tackling the traffickers at the highest national and international levels as well as middle market and street level dealers and crack houses in London. "Any suggestion that we should relax our approach is not only dangerous but divisive and undermines the hard work of police officers in London who are trying to stamp out the evil of heroin through enforcement, education and partnership with those communities who are most vulnerable." Mr Ghaffur's intervention followed a more tempered statement from the Association of Chief Police Officers which said that Mr Brunstrom's view was his own personal one and not theirs. Mr Brunstrom sparked anger among police colleagues when he told BBC Wales's Dragon's Eye programme that he was prepared to see the Class A drug sold on the street or through pharmacies. He said: "Heroin is very addictive but it's not very, very dangerous. "The question is actually not 'Am I prepared to see the Government selling heroin on the street corner or through the pharmacy?' but 'Why would we not want to do that? What is wrong with that?"' Mr Brunstrom believes open sale of the drug would wipe out the multi million-pound illegal trade and help cut crime, and that the current law is doing "more harm than good". He said dealers charged ?40 a gram for heroin but the Government could sell it for ?1 a gram, cutting theft by addicts and violence by dealers. Mr Brunstrom has previously compared the law on drugs to alcohol prohibition in the United States in the 1920s. Recently, he has faced controversy over crackdowns on speeding motorists. Mr Ghaffur is head of the Met's Specialist Crime Directorate and the highest ranking minority ethnic officer in Britain's largest force, having achieved the equivalent of chief constable status in 2001. As well as drugs, his remit covers murders, gun crime, child protection, the Flying Squad, the Fraud Squad and organised crime. A former CID officer, he spent much of his career in Greater Manchester, including in the notorious Moss Side area. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek