Pubdate: Mon, 07 Jul 2008 Source: Evening Times (UK) Copyright: 2008 Newsquest (Herald & Times) Limited Contact: http://www.eveningtimes.co.uk Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3252 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) CAMERON TOLD HE SHOULD GIVE HEROIN DEALERS LIFE HEROIN dealers should be given life sentences, Tory leader David Cameron was told in Glasgow today. Mr Cameron was campaigning in the Glasgow East by-election with candidate Davena Rankin and he met a mother whose son died of heroin abuse and a father who had two addict sons. Janis Dobbie and Jim Docherty took previous Tory boss Iain Duncan Smith on a tour of the East End almost six years ago to let him see the problems afflicting the area. Today, Mr Duncan Smith was back with his successor Mr Cameron. Mr Docherty told them he backed the Conservatives' hardline policies on drugs and praised their willingness to listen to ordinary people's views. He said: "We think the policies they have for tackling the drug abuse we have in our communities is very good. "They come here and discuss issues like this with people like us and ask us what we want and how we would go about tackling it. "That's proper consultation and they have formed their policies out of listening to people like us. "We want zero tolerance, we want rehabilitation instead of methadone. "We want the drug counsellors to get off their backsides and do the work and get our kids clean. We are fed up burying them." Mr Docherty also urged other parties standing for the constituency to take a tougher stance on drugs and drug dealers. He said: "We want other parties coming out with strong policies, like giving life sentences to heroin dealers, not giving them two or three years and let them start selling heroin the same day they come out of jail." Mr Cameron gave a speech at St Jude's Church in Barlanark, where he accused the Labour Party of treating voters in Glasgow East "like fools". He said people were asking why Prime Minister Gordon Brown had not lived up to his pledge of ending "degrading poverty". "This is the broken society by-election," he said. "It comes at a time when the country is asking what is going on with the knife crime and violence in our streets." Mr Cameron said the Tories had a "clear mission and a clear plan". "Our mission is to repair our broken society - to heal the wounds of poverty, crime, social disorder and deprivation that are steadily making this country a grim and joyless place to live for far too many people. "While our society is broken today, it is not broken for ever. We can and will repair it; we can and will bring hope and aspiration to places where there is resignation and despair." Labour holds a 13,507 majority in the ward over the SNP. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom