Pubdate: Mon, 3 Mar 2008 Source: thelondonpaper (UK) Contact: 2008 News International Free Newspapers Ltd. Website: http://www.thelondonpaper.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4717 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?207 (Cannabis - United Kingdom) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) ATTITUDE TO DRUG-ABUSING CELEBRITIES 'SENDING WRONG MESSAGE' Leniency towards drug-abusing celebrities is sending out the wrong message to children and young people, the United Nations drug control agency said today. The International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) warned that allowing famous people to get away with drug crimes had a damaging effect on impressionable youngsters and undermines faith in the criminal justice system. INCB member Professor Hamid Ghodse said: "They get more lenient responses by the judiciary and law enforcement, and that is regrettable. "There should not be any difference between a celebrity who is breaking the law and non-celebrities. "Not only does it give the wrong messages to young people, who are often quite impressionable, but the wider public become cynical about the responses to drug offenders." He suggested that drug-abusing celebrities from the worlds of music and sport were treated with leniency, but was unwilling to name specific individuals. "A number of people have got a lenient response in the UK and around the world," Prof Ghodse said, at the launch of the INCB's annual report. The document said: "Depending on how the authorities respond in the case, the media reports and associated internet chatter often reflect or generate perceptions that the system has treated the celebrity ... more leniently than others. "The authorities ... should ensure that public celebrities who violate drug laws are made accountable." The report also expressed concern about rising opium production in Afghanistan - an issue which Britain has taken a lead in combating. Prof Ghodse, a former chairman of the INCB and professor of international drug policy at St George's University, London, said he believed international forces in Afghanistan had lost control, with opium production rising to 8,200 tons last year. The total in the previous 12 months was 6,100 tons, and just 185 tons in 2001 after a crackdown by the Taliban, which then had political control of the country. "It is not only drug agencies that can tackle this issue, it has to be with the rest of the elements that are trying to help," he said. The INCB called on Asian governments to set up or strengthen controls on the chemical acetic anhydride, which is used to manufacture cocaine from the opium crop. Tougher limits on the chemical could reduce amounts being smuggled into Afghanistan for use in illicit heroin factories, the organisation said. Britain remains one of the countries with the highest abuse of cocaine, along with Spain and Italy, the report said. It reproduced previously-published Home Office data which showed cocaine use in England and Wales rose from 2% to 2.4% in 2005/06 for 15- to 64-year-olds. While Prof Ghodse welcomed figures which indicated a continuing fall in cannabis use in the UK, he repeated concerns about a rise in the drug's strength. Home Office data revealed earlier this year that powerful "skunk" varieties accounted for just 15% of cannabis seizures in 2002 but now makes up between 70% and 80%. The INCB is the body which oversees the way governments adhere to international drug control treaties. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake