Pubdate: Thu, 15 Nov 2007 Source: Western Mail (UK) Copyright: 2007 Media Wales Ltd Contact: http://icwales.icnetwork.co.uk/ Author: Steffan Rhys, Western Mail Note: Additional reporting by Abbie Wightwick, Madeleine Brindley and Darren Devine Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?207 (Cannabis - United Kingdom) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) THE 'UNACCEPTABLE' REALITY OF THE WIDESPREAD USE OF ILLEGAL DRUGS BY OUR YOUNGSTERS CHILDREN as young as 10 are being charged with drug offences in Wales, according to figures obtained by the Western Mail. The figures detail a wide range of drug offences committed in each of Wales' four police force areas and show that hundreds of teenagers and younger children were arrested or charged with drug offences last year. Police officials yesterday said it was "unacceptable" that children were falling victim to drug abuse. While the majority of offences involved cannabis, some have involved the possession of heroin or cocaine, and groups dealing with young drug offenders said they had worked in rare instances with children as young as 14 who had taken heroin. The police and other organisations said "vulnerable" young people would sometimes be preyed on by older pushers, while it was also claimed that cannabis remained the gateway to harder drugs and that its downgrading to a class C drug in 2004 had set the fight against drugs back several years. Figures from South Wales Police showed that 217 people aged between 10 and 17 were arrested for unspecified drugs offences in the 2006-07 financial year, with the youngest of these aged 10. North Wales Police said that since 2002, 10 people aged 17 or under had been charged with possession of cocaine, with a further six charged with possession with intent to supply. In that time, 50 people under 17 had also been charged with possession of Ecstasy and 1,032 in possession of cannabis. The force said its youngest drugs offender between 2004 and 2006 was 11 with the youngest in the last financial year being 12. Between 2005 and 2007, Gwent Police said the youngest children charged with drug offences, in this instance trafficking and possession of cannabis, were 11. In 2006-07, 164 people aged between 11 and 17 were charged with possessing cannabis in the force area, five with possessing amphetamine, five with Ecstasy, one with cocaine and one with ketamine, a drug which is still rare in Wales. The youngest person charged by Dyfed-Powys Police with a drugs offence since 2005 is also 11 years old. One of the age categories used by the force is "five to 15" and in 2004-05, one person in this category was charged with possessing heroin. The force charged 36 children aged 15 or under with possessing cannabis last year. One teaching union warned yesterday that drugs were available to all young people in Wales and dealer turf wars sometimes spilled over into schools. Dr Philip Dixon, director of the Association of Teachers and Lecturers Cymru, said he knew of one rural secondary school where a 14-year-old had been involved in school fights over drug selling. "We are living in cloud cuckoo land if we think children in any of our secondary schools and colleges don't have access to drugs," Dr Dixon warned. Ecstasy now routinely costs around UKP2 a pill, less than a pint of beer in most pubs with heroin sold in UKP10 wraps, and a "teenth" (sixteenth of an ounce) of cannabis costing around UKP5. Cocaine remains comparatively expensive, usually costing between UKP40 and UKP55 a gram. Yesterday, those working firsthand with drug users gave their reasons for drug use among teenagers and younger children. Paul Cannon, a former police officer who is now a Rhondda Cynon Taff councillor and founder of Raid - Rhondda Against Illegal Drugs - said, "Top of the list of what is doing harm [to trying to reduce drug use] is the reclassification of cannabis from class B to C. "That was an absolutely major mistake. It has knocked us back years. It gave out wrong and mixed messages and we will pay a penalty for it. "It is a gateway drug. No one decides, having never done drugs before, to take heroin, they always start on cannabis. It is the easiest thing in the world to get cannabis. And the people who deal cannabis do not only deal cannabis. Mr Cannon said instances where younger teenagers became involved with hard drugs like heroin and cocaine were rare but said Raid had dealt with more than one case where children as young as 14 had become involved with heroin. "I firmly believe you have got to get to the children before they make the transition from primary to secondary school, where they will come into contact with it more and face peer pressure," he said. "But at the moment, the messages from television and celebrity go against the message we are pushing. "I see nothing that convinces me we have turned the corner. I'm seeing the same issues, the same problems and the same people now that I did five or six years ago. "But there are an awful lot of resources being put towards drugs by the police and the local authority is heavily involved. I do not know how much harder we can get the message out." Supt Tim Jones, of South Wales Police, who oversaw a recent police undercover operation in Bridgend which drew to a close on Tuesday with 26 heroin dealers and users - including one 17-year-old - jailed for a total of more than 70 years, said heroin use was more common after the age of 20. "Heroin use doesn't start becoming prevalent until they are into their early twenties and beyond," he said. "But substance misuse can start at an earlier age. "A pattern would be they drink a lot of alcohol, move to something like temazepam or cannabis or amphetamine and would later try something harder." Catriona Williams, chief executive of Children in Wales, said drug problems among children were often "masterminded by adults". "We know over the years of deliberate attempts by drug pushers to get young children hooked," she said. "A child of 10 involved in drugs is a child in need of support and help. It is an issue which needs continuing action to be taken both from the point of view of supporting children and prosecuting the adults who are deliberately pushing drugs in the direction of children." Shirley Jones, area manager for the West Glamorgan Council On Alcohol and Drug Abuse (Wgcada), based in Neath, said teenagers between 14 and 16 regularly accessed their services. Ms Jones said alcohol, cannabis and solvent abuse were far more common than class A drugs among young children but that cocaine and heroin use among children that age was "not unheard of". "One issue is that drugs have become cheaper while children have more money to spend," she said. In June, a report by Estyn said around a quarter of 15-year-olds use drugs, mainly cannabis, at least once a week, while a Home Office survey of 2005 said class A drug use among 11-15 year olds was around 4%. In April, the Statistics on Drug Misuse: England 2007 report said almost a third of 15-year-olds in England and Wales admitted drug use. In June, a report by Estyn earlier this year said about a quarter of 15-year-olds use drugs, mainly cannabis, at least once a week, while a Home Office survey of 2005 said class A drug use among 11-15 year olds was around 4%. A spokesman for South Wales Police said, "Overall, figures for drug offences committed by under-16s in South Wales is relatively low but the levels that are evident are unacceptable and we are working extremely hard to educate young people through initiatives in schools and youth orientated organisations across the force area. "There are a whole range of reasons why young people may be tempted by illegal substances, such as peer pressure, or a breakdown in family life. Drug pushers who carry out their illegal trade can easily take advantage of such impressionable young people, and care nothing for those who choose to use drugs, regardless of age. "In addition to law enforcement, education is the most important tool in our armoury in the fight against drugs use." Gareth Matthewson, head of Wales's largest secondary school, Whitchurch High in Cardiff, said there were "one or two cases a year" of pupils arriving in school under the influence of drugs. "Our job is to educate pupils about these substances and the consequences of taking them," he said. Both he and Dr Dixon warned that drugs affected students' work. They are told about this during discussions about drugs which form part of the school curriculum in personal and social development classes. Anne O'Connell, young persons worker for the charity Drugaid, regularly goes into schools to speak to students. "Any drug is going to affect work," she said. The impact on studies "depends on what you are using - if a young person is using cannabis then revision won't work because it may cause memory problems". Children and teenagers who smoke cannabis could also be at a higher risk of experiencing serious mental health problems later in life. Research at Cardiff University dispels the myth that cannabis is a "soft" or "harmless" drug after linking even occasional use of the Class C drug to serious mental health problems later in life. Dr Stanley Zammit, a clinical lecturer in the psychology of medicine at Cardiff University, said there was now enough evidence to warn young people that using cannabis could increase their risk of developing a psychotic illness later in life. He said, "The amount of people using cannabis has increased over the last 20 to 30 years and although it seems to be levelling off in some age groups, people are starting to use it at a younger age. "There is reason to believe that people who start at a young age may have a greater risk of developing a psychotic illness. "The evidence says that cannabis is not a 'harmless' drug." [sidebar] DRUGS - HOW YOUNG ARE THOSE ARRESTED? Age of the youngest person to be arrested for drugs offences last year, by force area: South Wales Police: 10 North Wales Police: 12 Gwent: 13 Dyfed-Powys: 12 - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake