Pubdate: Sun, 15 Oct 2006 Source: Sunday Herald, The (UK) Copyright: 2006 Sunday Herald Contact: http://www.sundayherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/873 Author: Liam McDougall, Home Affairs Editor REVEALED: HOW OUR JAILS CREATE A NEW GENERATION OF ADDICTS THE extent of heroin abuse in Scottish jails is creating a new generation of drug addicts and leading to a sense among staff that they are powerless to curb the crisis. A controversial report, commissioned by the Scottish Prison Service, also contains accusations that some officers "turn a blind eye" to drug use and see heroin as beneficial as it subdues inmates . The 265-page study was handed to prison service chiefs in June this year, but its findings have not previously seen the light of day. Researchers questioned inmates and staff in groups and one-to-one about the scale of drugs crisis in Scotland's prisons. Addictions specialists were further surveyed on prison drugs policy. Those questioned revealed a pattern of declining cannabis use and an explosion in the prevalence of heroin use. But, in a damning disclosure, the report states that new inmates who had never before used heroin were starting to take it because of its accessibility and as a means of escaping detection at drug tests. In the most explosive of the revelations, prison staff reveal they are being overwhelmed by the scale of the abuse, and inmates claim some officers ignore drug taking even when they have seen it taking place. The report also reveals that, of 60 addictions specialists surveyed, 49% believed the policy of mandatory drug testing had caused prisoners to begin taking heroin. Last night, Margaret Mitchell, the Scottish Tory justice spokeswoman, said: "If it takes a glass partition at visiting times to stop drugs getting into prisons then that's what will have to happen. I do not see any reason why prisons cannot be drug-free." Stewart Stevenson, SNP justice spokesman, described the report as a "wake-up call". He added: "We are still simply sending people back to the community to reoffend." A Scottish Prison Service spokesman said: "Drugs are a problem outside of prisons and so that is reflected inside prisons. We spend a lot of resources tackling the minority of people who choose to introduce drugs into prison. "But we are not complacent and will prosecute and report any incidents to the police wherever possible." - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine