Source: MSN News Authors: Shown with individual stories below Pubdate: Unknown - could not figure it out from the website Contact: http://news.uk.msn.com/ Editors note: This is a series, posted as one item. It is unknown if this series has been used in their cable TV broadcasts. It is currently online at: http://news.uk.msn.com/default.asp?featuredrugs DRUGS HAVE BECOME PART OF YOUTH CULTURE As Seizures Rise Rehabilitation Experts Warn Of Growing Problem by Sarah Shenker MSN NEWS POLITICIANS and police will rarely admit it on the record but drug misuse by Britain’s youth is increasing at an alarming rate. Estimates put the number of regular “recreational” users of ecstacy at anywhere between 100,000 and 500,000 a week and a new study of 22,000 schoolchildren has found that a third aged between 14 and 15 have taken drugs. Over the next seven days MSN News will examine all sides of the drugs debate. Cannabis is by far the most widely-experienced drug with nearly three-in-ten of the older age group having tried it at least once. Amphetamines, ecstacy and hallucinogens come next in the survey by the 11th annual “Young People” report by Exeter University’s Schools Health Education Unit. In interviews conducted by MSN News, a senior police officer, a high-profile drugs charity and a leading coroner have all expressed serious concern at current trends in the UK and at delays in getting addicts into rehabilitation clinics. Of particular concern is the growing use of heroin. Government figures released by Customs and Excise show a sharp rise in the number of heroin and methadone seizures for 1996, a 41 per cent rise on the previous year. Police seized almost 750,000 kilos of heroin with a street value estimated at over £55 million. Home Office figures indicated a tripling in seizures in the past two years. Prisoner officers and GPs are both noting increases in the number of drug abusers, which reached over 32,500 in 1995. A 1996 parliamentary report from the Office for Science and Techonology highlighted the fact that illicit drug use continues to rise in the UK and abroad. And despite an increase in the number of arrests, the demand for heroin is rising. Catherine Perez-Phillips of drug charity Release said that the last couple of years have seen an increase in heroin use among young people. “We’re undoubtedly seeing more calls about heroin. There’s more of it around and the prices have dropped. Everybody is either smoking it or snorting it.” Currently prices for heroin stand as low as £10 for a gram. The Government is reviewing its drug policy with the help of the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs. Gerry Dickinson, DCI and head of the West Yorkshire Police drugs squad, described the increases in heroin abuse as “an extremely worrying trend”. “Somehow, as a nation, we’ve got to reduce it,” he said. Blackburn coroner Andre Rebello, who has previously warned of the increasing levels of heroin abuse in the UK, has repeated his call for immediate action, saying “we need to raise public awareness and bring the message home to the health authorities and the Government that new inititives are needed.” He warned: “It’s going to get worse before it gets better.” More than a quarter of his cases are heroin or methadone overdoses. Drug taking he said, is “more and more accepted by young people as a route to escapism.” Katherine Evans of the Health Education Authority said: “A lot of young people are ignorant of the risks. There is no such thing as safe drug taking.” But both DCI Dickinson and Catherine Perez-Phillips have also warned of the dangers of forgetting other drug addictions, such as to benzodiapezines, tranquillisers and to speed. .......... THE WAR AGAINST DRUGS HAS BEEN LOST by Kevin Williamson for MSN NEWS THE war against drugs has been lost. And that’s now official. While most governments and politicians dogmatically refuse to concede defeat a recent report by the United Nations underlines just how badly the drug wars have been lost. In the last decade world opium production has trebled. Global production of coca (from which cocaine is produced) has doubled and most staggeringly of all illicit drug trade now accounts for an estimated eight per cent of world trade. Stop and think about it for a moment. Eight per cent of world trade. The drug barons internationally have now become more powerful than any individual government or multinational corporation. In countries where drug plant production is concentrated particularly in Central and South America as well as in areas of Asia and North Africa, the drug cartels have more military muscle than their native states and in some countries like Columbia are virtually indistinguishable from the state itself. In the UK, HM Customs admit that only around 10 per cent of the heroine that floods into the country is intercepted. The other 90 per cent reaches it’s intended market on the street. It’s almost as if the drug laws don’t exist and free trade has been established. How much more convincing do politicians need to realise that the war against drugs has been lost. Illicit drugs are now part and part of the society we live in and no amount of coercion, clampdown, long prison sentences or undercover police operations are going to make the slightest bit of difference. A unpalatable fact of life for some but stating the obvious if you look at the facts. So what do we do? When the war against drugs has been lost there is certainly no point battling on and piling up the casualties. Or continuing the (very expensive) tried and failed methods of drug prohibition - which in practice is nothing more than a futile attempt at containment. Maybe it’s time we came to accept the obvious - that drugs are here to stay whether we like it or not. Common sense surely suggests the latter approach is long overdue. And that calls for some radical rethinking on how we deal with what has now become a drug society. The logical place to start in this debate is by asking some relevant questions. Such as: Why do people take drugs? What do we mean by drugs? Are all drugs harmful, addictive and dangerous? If not, which drugs are causing problems? And how can we reduce the harm that these drugs cause? It’s only by asking questions such as these that answers will begin to form. And from them solutions. A large part of that process is freeing the debate from the hypocrisy and hysteria that has been used to spread a smokescreen over the whole debate. Groups with vested interests - whether they be peddlars of drugs like alcohol; religious fundamentalists; ranting tabloid editors; hypocritical politicians; etc - should not be allowed to set the agenda on this debate. It’s too important to be left in their hands. It’s for this reason that I’ve written a book entitled Drugs And The Party Line (published by Rebel Inc, Oct 1997) which starts with the questions above, examines all aspects of drug policy, and then concludes with a rounded out cohesive argument for changing both the drug laws and the way drug education is carried out. I believe it’s time to stop harassing and criminalising drug users and start learning to live with drugs in our midst. .......... BLAIR PROMISES TO TACKLE DRUG MENACE Prime Minister Tells MSN News Of New Measures To Drive Dealers Off The Streets by Nick Assinder MSN NEWS THE Prime Minister has promised a concerted Government crackdown on drug abuse. As a father with teenage children he is particularly concerned about the prevalence of illegal drugs on the nation’s streets. And he exclusively told MSN News: “This government is committed to cracking down on drug abuse and ensuring that measures are in place against dealers. In addition we are determined to see better drug abuse prevention. “As part of that campaign we are announcing the appointment of a drugs czar to co-ordinate the effort.” The search for a czar-like figure to lead the battle against drug abuse has already begun.. Recruitment advertisements for the UK Anti-drugs Co-ordinator - dubbed the drug czar - appeared in a number of national newspapers. The key function will be to review existing Government strategy and recommend possible improvements. The advert stresses that the job is high-profile, with direct access to the Prime Minister, and calls for heavyweight applicants. Job requirements include proven leadership skills, experience of the drugs or a comparable field, and motivation skills. The advert also stresses that the ability to squeeze “added value” from resources over which the drug czar would not have direct control. The drug czar will answer to Ann Taylor, President of the Council, who chairs the Cabinet sub-committee on drug misuse. Mrs Taylor, noting that last year 23,313 abusers attended drug services for the first time or after a gap, said: “We want somebody to lead, head up, inspire, galvanise this campaign in such a way that we can make a greater impact on this very significant problem. “The time is right to move up a gear in terms of fighting drugs, because the problem is getting worse year on year.” The successful applicant would not necessarily be a senior police officer, Mrs Taylor insisted. “There shouldn’t be any assumptions about who this person will be - we are open-minded about who should get this position,” she said. Government is planning a series of measures including the appointment of a drugs czar and the introduction of longer sentences for repeat dealers. The use of drugs of all kinds has become one of the defining characteristics of modern society. Statistics suggest the overwhelming majority of teenagers have used drugs at one time or another, and that many youngsters use them on a regular basis in the same way their parents use alcohol. And those parents probably lived through the 1960s and 70s when you actually had to make an effort not to come into contact with drugs and an even bigger effort not to experiment like everyone else around you. It was what made the 60s swing or, more realistically, sleep. When Oasis star Noel Gallagher said taking drugs was as much a part of everyday life as having a cup of tea he was pilloried for encouraging the nation’s youth into a life of depravity and decadence. No one seemed to take on board the fact that he was accurately reflecting reality for tens of thousands of young and not-so-young people. The politicians trotted out the usual attacks and not a single voice was raised in Parliament suggesting that, if this was really true, then it deserved to be treated seriously and examined rather more carefully. The message from the lawmakers was simple - drugs are bad and drug takers are to be punished and-or pitied. For politicians, the drugs issue is a no-go area. The first sign that an MP might be advocating anything other than total prohibition with severe punishments for transgressors lands him or her in serious trouble. Outspoken Labour front-bencher Clare Short discovered that to her cost when she suggested there should be a debate about the benefits or hazards of the decriminalisation of some so-called soft drugs. She caused another sensation when she refused to tell an MSN News chat user whether or not she had taken drugs because the same question would then be asked of other front-benchers, some of whom would have to lie. The Liberal Democrats regularly pass motions at their party conferences calling for some sort of relaxation of current drug controls, or for a debate over decriminalisation. But the leadership always slaps down the proposers and reiterates the anti-drug line. And, most famously, Bill Clinton caused hilarity tinged with some disbelief when he said that, during his time as a student in Britain, he smoked cannabis but didn’t inhale. The trouble is, drugs aren’t going to go away and the “debate-at-your-peril” response from the politicians may be doing more harm than good. If it is true that Britain’s youth is walking around in a near-permanent state of doped-out oblivion, or Ecstasy-induced euphoria it might be something you would expect a responsible government to tackle head-on. But the whole issue is surrounded by ignorance and fear and no one wants to be the one to open Pandora’s Box. For every expert who says decriminalisation of some, or all, drugs would make the problem easier to control and take the gangsters out of the equation there is another who will just as forcibly argue that such a move would be the first step on a slippery slope towards anarchy. Only a couple of things seem certain. First, drug taking is widespread and is not confined to any single social or age groups. Second, the need by some users to feed serious drug habits is playing an increasingly large part in criminal activity. Perhaps those facts alone should be enough to warrant a new look at the entire issue. The Conservative Party has a strong line on drugs and beieves dealers should be punished with severe sentences. A spokesman said: “We beieve drugs are a threat to the whole fabric of society because of the links to crime. “They don’t just hurt those people who take them, they hurt people all around them.” The Liberal Democrats are committed to setting up a Royal Commission “charged with the developing policies to tackle the drugs problem at its roots.” They also focus on the import of drugs and promise to give the police and Customs and Excise “the support they need” to stop drugs coming into the country. The rump Liberal Party, which broke away from the Lib Dems, are far more radical. They call for state control of all illegal drugs to take the gangsters out of the equation. Said a spokesman:“The state would licence the provision of drugs. That would allow the supplies to be controled. Prohibition hasn’t worked and has led to a rise in criminal activity associated wth drugs. “This way would end a lot of the crime, that is why so many police forces support such a move.” .......... ECSTASY AND CLUBBING WITH ROSIE I Only Buy From Dealers I Know Words by Sarah Shenker and Pictures by Christophe Tweedie MSN NEWS THE FIRST time Rosie did drugs she was 15 years old. Her boyfriend was a dealer, and they took some acid. “Disaster area” she said. “It was a dud so I didn’t get anything off it. Then I went to Reading Festival with some friends and took it again. It was proper acid and it was really strong. It was actually a bad experience.” But she wasn’t discouraged, and kept on taking it. “Although there were really bad parts to that trip, there was some stuff that I was really interested in. Some of it was amazing and I just wanted to take it again in different surroundings.” “It’s the escapism of it, where everything else is blocked out. The hallucinations, seeing the world differently, all the usual clichés.” She took acid about once a month until she finished boarding school. Meanwhile she started to go clubbing in London, and started taking pills and speed. “A lot of my friends were doing it and I was very curious. Also, I got into the dance music and it was just a natural progression.” Now Rosie is 20 and at university. She doesn’t worry about the dangers of ecstasy. “I don’t really think about it. Also, I only buy from dealers I know, or from friends who buy from dealers they know. I used to sometimes buy from people I didn’t know, in a club. I feel stupid about it once I’ve done it, but I still do it. I just kick myself afterwards.” Otherwise, she believes that she can manage the possible health risks and dangers. “I go clubbing with a bunch of friends. We all know each other well and we all watch out for each other.” She’s never had a scare, but a good friend of hers had a bad experience while at Tribal Gathering, a large outdoor dance music festival. “There was a bit of a history of epilepsy in the family, but she had never had a fit. She took some E and went on one of the fairground rides they had there. She had a huge seizure. She couldn’t move. By the time they managed to stop the ride and get her off, her heart had stopped. There were paramedics, and they managed to get it going again.” It doesn’t really scare her. “I was really angry at her for having put herself in that situation. I feel that I’m careful and that I take care of herself.” Rosie is the stereotype of the bored middle-class teenager who does drugs for kicks and believes that no harm will ever come of her. “I wouldn’t touch anything stronger. It’s a social thing, and a recreational things. I smoke gear during the week, and do pills and stuff sometimes on weekends. “It’s such a normal thing. My dad used to smoke weed in front of us kids.” .......... ECSTASY TOOK MY DANIEL AWAY Heather Ashton Now Fights To Stop Children Taking Drugs Words by Sarah Shenker and Pictures by Christophe Tweedie MSN NEWS DANIEL ASHTON was 17-years-old when he died in a busy night-club in Blackpool. He was found slumped in a corner, unconscious. The bouncers thought he was drunk, and refused to let his friends help him. Eventually an ambulance was called. When they got to him he was in a coma. Three hours after he left home, he was pronounced dead. It was 11.10pm. At the inquest into his death, the coroner Sammy Lee revealed that Danny had died as a result of taking ecstasy. In the couple of minutes it took him to choke to death, Daniel Ashton had become another statistic to feed the public’s fear about ecstasy and its side-effects. Daniel Ashton was an unlikely candidate for an ecstasy death. Daniel wasn’t interested in drugs. He wouldn’t even finish a course of antibiotics if he could avoid it. When his mother asked him about drugs he would tell her not to worry. “I’ve got more sense then that,” he’d tell her. “I’m not a smack-head, I’m no junky. I’ve got some common sense.” When he was 16, Daniel wrote a play for his class about drug-awareness: it was the story of a kid who died after taking drugs. Like the more famous ecstasy casualty Leah Betts, he was a smart kid, with ambitions. Sometimes he wanted to be a physics teacher, sometimes he wanted to write educational books for children. Then he won the Dramatist of the Year award at school, and decided he wanted to be an actor. His teacher was pushing him to go to drama school. She said he was a natural. But he was at college studying sound engineering just in case. His mother Heather Ashton is petite and dressed in pink. She sits curled in a ball in her chair, chain-smoking cigarettes as she talks about Daniel’s death. The girl he was with said she took two ecstatsy tablets and Daniel took two, but Daniel didn’t take two ecstasy tablets, there was only one found in his body. From all the tests they did they knew that he had only taken the one. “Danny was seen that night, approached by a well-known drug dealer in the nightclub, offering him drugs. Dan was laughing and shaking his head saying ‘No way’, and later a friend saw Daniel drinking from a bottle and then he didn’t see him again the rest of the night. When he heard the news next day he was just in shock because there was no way Daniel would have taken drugs that night. He said ‘If he took drugs, it was put into that bottle.’ We just don’t know what happened at all. “It’s just a big jigsaw. A few of his friends saw him slumped in a corner of this nightclub where the bouncer had just dragged him, and to our knowledge he was there for at least 20 minutes, and the doorman refused to let any of his friends help him. He was unconscious in a corner in the nightclub. The doorman said later ‘Oh, I thought he was drunk’, but if he was drunk and unconscious, he still should not have left him slumped. He wasn’t in a recovery position, he was just slumped in a position where he could choke to death, which is basically how he went into a coma. By the time the ambulance was called They tried to get the tubes down his throat and they couldn’t. It was all too late. He more or less died in the nightclub. “He left here at 8.10pm and that was at 11.10pm. That’s how quick it all happened.” Before Daniel’s death, Heather had no idea of the extent of drug-taking among kids in Blackpool. “If somebody died of a drug overdose, whichever drug it was, you’d just think, ‘Oh, drug addicts, what do they expect? They ask for what they get.’ Ecstasy seems to be the normal part of a night out, especially on the rave scene. And there again, I think rave music is hypnotic, it’s like voodoo music. The kids get tagged along with this music. These drugs, it’s all part and parcel, it’s the same effects. It’s just a form of voodoo, and if I had my way I’d ban raves because it just seems to encourage kids to do this sort of thing. Heather now chairs a support group for families hit by drug abuse. “When I lost Daniel, everyone was bombarding me to get this drug awareness group going because it had a massive impact on the town when Daniel died. Nobody realised how bad it was in Blackpool. Because so many people knew Dan, they thought it would be an opportunity to get people to really listen and face up to the problem.” The support group produces a newsletter, car stickers, information leaflets, and pictures of Daniel. They raise all the money themselves. They try to get the kids involved. A group of Daniel’s friends have formed a football team, and they play charity matches under the name Daniel FC. It has proven so popular that they are getting together a second team. Heather says that it was Daniel’s friends who helped her cope with losing him. “The only thing that kept me going was talking about Daniel, constantly. If people were talking about Daniel, then I could relate to them. I couldn’t relate to any of my friends my own age because they didn’t want to talk about it, it was too upsetting.” “Kids today seem to think ecstasy is a soft drug, a ‘recreational drug’, that’s what they’re calling it. But it’s now classed an A drug because it is so serious They didn’t realise the extent of the dangers until they started producing figures. Daniel was supposed to be the 62nd death, but the ecstasy related deaths, there must be thousands of them. The kids, they’re not really living, they’re surviving, with heart, lung, kidney, livers defects, with brain damage. All related to ecstasy, and there aren’t any figures for that. It’s too terrifying for them to face up to. “And the dealers, they’re not like how we used to think of dealers. You know, these shifty-eyed men and all that. It can be their best friends in school, in college. It just seems to be so fashionable with the kids. They don’t want to say no.” (continued in Part 2)