Pubdate: Thu, 31 May 2007 Source: Belfast Telegraph (UK) Copyright: 2007 Belfast Telegraph Newspapers Ltd. Contact: http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/42 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?207 (Cannabis - United Kingdom) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) SEARCHERS MUST TACKLE JAIL DRUG SCOURGE Alarming figures showing how many prisoners in Northern Ireland are using drugs indicate that there is an urgent need to find ways of stopping the supplies. Although the percentage of positive tests dropped from 25% in 2005 to 15% last year, this compares to just 7% in 2002, when the problem surfaced. The stark fact is that drugs showed up in nearly 2,000 tests carried out during the last two years in Ulster's prisons, at Maghaberry, Magilligan and Hydebank. There is no indication of how they were obtained, but the main source must be visitors to prison, as in Britain. Finding an answer will not be easy, since prison staff are stretched and searching for drugs is not their top priority. But if we have reached the state, comparable to Britain, where drugs are as easy to obtain in prison as on the streets, far more attention - and resources - must be devoted to the problem. The "high security" Maghaberry prison is the greatest offender, with almost one in three drugs tests, over the past three years, showing positive. In Hydebank, where young people are held, there was an encouraging drop from 27% in 2005 to 8% last year. Whatever the authorities are doing, searching both prisoners and visitors, it is clearly not enough. Since the release of terrorist prisoners, after the Good Friday Agreement, there is a suspicion that discipline has been relaxed, along with the numbers of guards on duty, allowing the drugs trade to flourish. While the Northern Ireland figure of 15% positive results last year compares favourably with Britain, it could be only the tip of the iceberg. Here the tests are voluntary, in return for privileges, whereas in Britain there is mandatory drug testing once a month on 5% of inmates. Hardened drug users are unlikely to volunteer here for testing. Since a relatively high percentage of prisoners will already be taking drugs, the prison service should be learning from best practice elsewhere, in intercepting the supply and offering rehabilitation. Searching should be a routine procedure, for prisoners and visitors, and more use of CCTV and sniffer dogs would help. Former prisoners, in Britain, have described the ingenious methods used to bring in drugs, which must be countered. Visitors would have cannabis in condoms, passed to the prisoners, or drugs might be thrown over prison walls from a nearby road. Prisoners who are on drugs are usually easier for the prison authorities to deal with, so a blind eye may often be turned. But society is left with a problem, after their release, and greater vigilance, combined with better in-prison rehabilitation, must be the best answer. Drugs provide no solutions, inside or outside prison. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath