Pubdate: Sun, 07 Mar 2004 Source: Observer, The (UK) Copyright: 2004 The Observer Contact: http://www.observer.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/315 Author: Amelia Hill Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) SUPER-HEROIN DEALERS TARGET MIDDLE CLASSES Drug traffickers are targeting middle-class Britons with high-purity heroin that users prefer to smoke rather than inject, says a new United Nations drug agency report. Tailoring products to meet the sensitivities of those British users who find injection repulsive will create a wider market for the drug, warns the International Narcotics Control Board. 'The illicit market operates in a very smart way, selling a drug to a new class of users by telling them, "Use it in a different way and you won't become addicted",' said Rainer Wolfgang Schmid, a board member. 'Middle-class users will not inject when they start taking heroin, but when they become addicted, which they certainly will, they will move on to injection and then the other problems kick in.' The board, an independent UN body that monitors global drug trafficking and use, said a flood of high-grade heroin from Afghanistan to Britain, combined with the new marketing tactic, would boost the numbers of those prepared to experiment with the drug. 'Injection has become very unattractive to young people, especially in Britain, because of its link to HIV,' said Dr Herbert Schaepe, who is the board's secretary. 'Trafficking groups who want to continue to make money are constantly looking for new illicit marketing strategies to increase their profits, and this is one of their cleverest tricks yet,' he added. 'The heroin coming in from Afghanistan now is so pure that smoking it will give users enough of a kick to get them hooked,' he said. 'The dealers tell new users heroin isn't addictive if smoked, but it's not true: heroin is heroin, however it's used.' The board's annual report also warns that the price of the drug is falling due to the increasing level of production in Afghanistan of opium poppies, the raw material for heroin. The UK has more than 270,000 heroin and crack cocaine addicts, only 57,000 of them registered as users, according to the British Crime Survey. 'This is a depressing indication of how weak a grip the Government has on users and how little idea they have of the genuine scale of the problem,' said a Home Office source. Opium production had almost stopped in Afghanistan, the main source of the UK's heroin, but since the Taliban were ousted from power two years ago it has been higher than ever. Some 3,600 tons of opium was produced in Afghanistan last year, 6 per cent more than in 2002. This was nearly 80 per cent of world cultivation and was the source of three-quarters of the heroin sold in Western Europe. 'The distribution networks for heroin are sophisticated, and the determination and ingenuity of dealers and local distributors should not be underestimated,' said a spokeswoman for the National Criminal Intelligence Service. 'Although the service has so far no proof that the middle-class market for heroin is increasing, we've seen with crack cocaine that dealers will always look to exploit complex new markets and opportunities to maximise their profits,' she added. The Government reclassified cannabis to allow the police to focus on serious drugs such as heroin, but the UN has warned that this strategy could be undone if street prices for the drug fall as a result of rising supply. 'We're highly aware that traffickers constantly change their marketing to get a toehold in new markets,' said a Home Office spokeswoman. 'This is a problem being faced by the United States and we are working with them to tackle it together.' - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin