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/ Note: Due to the size of this item, it has been posted in two parts. .......... LIFE ON THE STREETS OF BRITAIN AS A DEALER Words by Sarah Shenker and Pictures by Christophe Tweedie MSN NEWS ZIGGI and Dan used to be drug dealers. But when the childhood friends stumble upon a bargain, one of them usually picks up where they left off, until they’ve unloaded the goods. You could call them opportunistic dealers. Mostly they dealt cannabis, but Ziggi has dealt speed, pills, LSD. Probably cocaine too, but he won’t say either way. Both are articulate and successful in their current jobs. Ziggi is married and has a baby. Dan toked on his first joint when he was about six or seven. His dad used to smoke occasionally in front of the TV. From the age of ten he would go to west London with his friends to buy cannabis. If they were lucky, they wouldn’t get conned (ending up with grass and dirt instead of weed or resin). “When you’re about twelve or thirteen you get to know the whereabouts of the local ‘frontline’, and basically you go down there and you get to know the people. Before you know it you’re looking after their kids and watching them weigh out kilos. You’re in their flat and you can see outside 16 police vans, and you’re thinking ‘ I should be in school and I’m going to be in trouble’, but it all blows over.” Dan’s never been arrested. He got into dealing “cos so many people smoked weed and because we smoked so much weed So what you’re doing is selling it but often you’re just smoking it. You’re providing a service to them and to yourself. But you don’t really make much money from weed unless you’re bringing over ridiculous amounts.” Ziggi describes the process: “To deal, you’ve got to find someone who deals and find out where they get their supply from. For us it was quite easy because of all the people we knew. You’re always going to get close enough to someone who’ll take you round their supplier. They get to know your face and you go round there on your one time and just say ‘Look, what can you do me for?’. But what you want to do is get to his supplier.” Cut out the middlemen, and you get a better deal. “See, dealers come in different levels. You have your small-time dealer - he deals in ounces. He’ll pick up an ounce for £80, and the max he can sell it for is £120. Then the next level up, you’re buying 9-bars. You’ll pick up a 9-bar for about £600.” “If you get three of those, you can pick them up for £400,” Dan adds. “If you can buy in kilos then you’re going to get a really good deal,” Ziggi says. He goes on to explain how to make money dealing speed and LSD. “In Finland you can sell a trip for £15 and here you can buy a sheet of 100 trips for 50p each. I knew a guy who was writing letters to his friends on trip, mailing them to Finland, and they were mailing him cheques back. And it’s still going on.” When he felt himself getting in too deep, Dan quit dealing. “You get people dropping in at your house at any hour in the morning. You feel like you’re getting slowly closed in, closed in, like something bad’s going to happen So you just say ‘f**** it’.” Ziggi explains: “To be making money dealing - and you’re not skanking anybody - you’ve got to be in you’re house virtually 24 hours a day. You’re a prisoner in your own house because if you go out, you lose £50, and then people might not come back. They might go somewhere else because around here, there’s probably a dealer on every street.” Neither of them believes that by indulging in cannabis they place themselves on a very slippery slope. Dan insists: “It’s a social thing. You’re in a club, if someone has a spliff, you wanna smoke it. You get a little high,” he drawls, “and it’s a nice high and it’s harmless. It’s refreshing,” “Everything else is anti-social,” he continues. “E, you’re on your own. Trip, you’re on your own. Coke, you’ve got a problem, crack, you’ve definitely got a problem. Heroin, you’re dead.” .......... HEROIN IS A MAJOR THREAT TO SOCIETY Police Chief Warns Of Massive Increase In Drug Abuse Words by Sarah Shenker and Pictures by Christophe Tweedie MSN NEWS DETECTIVE Chief Inspector Gerry Dickinson has been fighting drugs since joining the police 28 years ago. The walls of his office are covered with merit awards and commendations, and group photographs with smiling colleagues. There are anti-drug campaign posters too, and a worn-out map of Great Britain. In a prominent place is a certificate: Dickinson is not just the head of the West Yorkshire police drug squad, he is also a qualified irish whiskey taster. Just like with the whiskey, Dickinson is passionate about his work. He is particularly successful: his team has seized more than £4 million worth of drugs in the past fortnight. They just arrested a pusher who dealt to 12 year-olds at a school gate. DCI Dickinson is in an ideal position to chart how the drugs culture has changed over the years. The drugs culture then was very different to what it is today. “I can remember when there were three registered drug addicts in this area and now we’re up to the thousands.” His interest in the drugs culture has always been a bit of a crusade. “I was interested because the youth of my era was involved with cannabis, the long hair and the bead’s and the flower power and the LSD. I got an interest in stopping its growth because of the inherent dangers which you could see were coming and I’ve now seen arrive.” “You could see there was going to be problems. Contrary to what a lot of people say, I can say I have seen the person who started on smoking dope, move on and on and on, and they are drug addicts. Smoking dope is the start of a downfall.” He is concerned with the current direction of the drugs culture. “My worry is that we’ve got them not even bothering with the dope, speed or ecstasy. They’re going straight onto the smack. Heroin and cocaine used to be barely heard of. Now it’s at epidemic proportions.” “Heroin is our greatest concern at the moment. It’s got to be. We’ve had a 200 per cent increase in seizures in the last year in West Yorkshire.” “A lot of people quote the number of registered addicts,” he said, “but they’re not my worry. In effect, they are being given the help, we’re getting them off the heroin. It’s all the unregistered ones which are my worry. They need the help. What’s the point in me referring a drug addict to an agency for treatment but there’s going to be three to four months until there’s a bed available? That’s no good.” As for dealers, he is worried by increased production of heroin, especially from traditional cocaine production areas, such as Columbia: “I understand that you’re getting situations where for every 5 kilos of coke you buy now, you’ve got to buy a kilo of heroin. They’re pushing the smack trade. We’re getting to the stage now where there’s the very strong opinion - and I agree with it - that we’ve got very, very clever, influential business people who are purposely keeping the prices down until we’ve got a vast amount of people totally addicted to it, and then they can boost the price to whatever they wish.” “Drug pushers are the lowest of the low. I’ve no qualms, no thoughts on giving them anything in their favour. They’re just the lowest of the low.” He is equally harsh about the recreational users: “I don’t like the name “recreational user” at all,” he insists. “There ain’t no recreational drug user. There are drug users, who are running the riskof harming themselves. I won’t condone any drug use.” .......... WE’RE IN DANGER OF LOSING THE DRUGS WAR Coroners Warn Of The Number Of Young Deaths Because Of Drugs Words by Sarah Shenker and Pictures by Christophe Tweedie MSN NEWS ANDRE REBELLO believes Britain is in grave danger of losing the war against drugs. He should know. Since he became a coroner three years in Blackpool he has become sicked by the waste of young lives claimed by drug abuse. The situation become so grave in the north west of England this year that Rebello and three other coroners from Lancashire called an emergency news conference to warn the public about the numbers of heroin and methadone related deaths. The coroners feel the deaths are being ignored and they had to take dramatic action to highlight the problem. One of his colleagues, Anne Hind, coroner for Blackpool, had seen a 17 year-old boy die from a heroin overdose a couple of weeks before. “We felt we had to bring drug deaths to the attention of the public in a dramatic way.” he said “It had been something that had been constant over many years, we thought it was going to get worse before it got better and therefore by calling a press conference we were hoping to increase public awareness with regards to protecting their own families and to bring the message home to the health authorities and to the government that perhaps new initiatives were needed to try and do something. “The situation will get worse,” he warned, “until there are more resources found with regard to effective treatments and care for addicts. Methadone is a short-term solution. People can get addicted to methadone and be on it for many, many years. The reaction to their grim warning has been positive. “I’ve had a lot of encouragement from families of victims who’ve suffered fatal consequences as a result of taking methadone.” Methadone is prescribed by doctors to drug addicts in an attempt to ween them off heroin. Andre Rebello believes that a lot of doctors are intimidated by drug addicts and may prescribe methadone in an attempt to get the addicts out of their surgeries. The consequences of there being few specialists dealing with drug addicts mean that “there are more cases attributable to methadone, a prescribed drug, than to heroin. Prescribed methadone is being used as a currency for heroin and getting into the hands of inexperienced users with fatal consequences.” But Rebello is quick to point out that he is not pointing the finger of blame onto anyone. “One thing which everyone has to appreciate is that coroners don’t have any solutions,” he said. “Our job is to draw attention to matters, which if not remedied, could cause future fatalities.” He’s been in talks with the Home Secretary, who he believes is prepared to make changes to the ways in which methadone is prescribed, and to explore the options of custodial sentencing. As for why people get themselves into such situations in the first place, Rebello is mystified: “I don’t know why people take drugs,” he said. “All I know is it’s becoming more and more accepted by young people as a route to escapism.” He was not dealt with an ecstasy death in his area, but “Ecstasy is a drug taken by na users,” he believes, “trying to find some extra fulfilment in life which perhaps isn’t there. “It’s not a leisure drug, it’s a category A drug, categorised by government scientists as being a dangerous substance and I have fellow coroners in Lancashire who have dealt with ecstasy deaths and I understand they are quite horrendous.” The battle against drugs is a war which we are in extreme danger of losing, according to Rebello. “It is a war and there are fatalities. There are casualties, and the paramedics get to an awful lot that don’t get to me as coroner.” ......... I CAN’T STOP MY CHILDREN TAKING DRUGS Words by Sarah Shenker and Pictures by Christophe Tweedie MSN NEWS SUSAN FORD looks at the basket at her feet. “What’s this?,” she asks, poking it with her foot. “What’s this?,” she repeats, this time laughing. The basket is crammed full of Rizla papers, cigarettes and small tins. It belongs to her second daughter, Ann. Ann smokes dope and her mother knows it, although she usually pretends not to tolerate it even when she smokes it in front of her. In fact, despite her initial claims to the contrary, Susan has smoked cannabis before herself. “Oh, maybe I had a few drags on your cannabis cigarette,” she says to Ann. “It was just to see what you were talking about, but I couldn’t see that it was any different from any other cigarette.” Susan, who refused to let MSN News use her real name, has three daughters, aged 26, 23 and 16. All three have dabbled in drugs, from cannabis to cocaine, all with their mother’s full knowledge - if not tacit consent. She found out about her eldest daughter Angela’s habits when, at university, she told her mother she had eaten a hash cake. “I said ‘Oh. Did you? Why?’. Clearly it was something they were fairly used to doing although I don’t think it was widely available when she was at school.” What Susan was soon to find out however was that Angela’s habits were a bit more sophisticated. She was doing cocaine, and even introduced Ann to it. With the added help of her boyfriend James, Ann was heavily into cocaine by the time she was twelve. “The first time I knew about it is when she had this row with James and wouldn’t go over to a friend’s house because they were going to be taking drugs.” Ann rowed with James after an incident at a friend’s house where had been held at gun point by a sixteen year-old high on god knows what, and James had hid in the loo rather than try to help her. She was fourteen. As for the youngest daughter Amy, Ann claims: “She had her first joint when she was nine, with my mum.” Susan denies it, of course. “Amy has tried cannabis, I know she’s tried cannabis, okay?” is her terse reply. Yet Susan’s tolerance of her children’s illicit and illegal drug experiments is merely a reflection her initial experiences with Angela. “I was much more strict with Angela, and the only result was that she did it behind my back.” “You can’t actually stop kids from doing things - if their peer group are all doing it, they’ll be doing it. I’d rather know what they’ll be doing. I’ve never said ‘Don’t do this or that’, I’ve just said ‘If you do that, this might happen, that might happen.” Angela believes her laissez-faire policy has paid off in the case of her youngest daughter, Amy. “It seems to me as if everybody in her class has tried cannabis, and they seem to think it’s terribly clever to take Es, but I’d be surprised if she was still doing drugs. She’s seen it, done it and knows it’s a waste of time.” Susan doesn’t strech as far as believing in legalisation. She agrees that the new Labour government doesn’t seem too interested in changing existing drug policy, but believes a serious clampdown is on its way. “I’m sure government policy will change as soon as Tony Blair’s children become of a vulnerable age. His children are now in school,so the priority is ‘education, education, education’, but as soon as they get to 16 and they get a sniff of drugs, there will be a clampdown on drugs. I’m just waiting for it.” .......... WHY IT’S IMPORTANT NOT TO JUDGE DRUG USERS Release Is Concerned About The Rise In Heroin Words by Sarah Shenker and Pictures by Christophe Tweedie MSN NEWS Catherine Perez-Phillips spends most of her day talking to drug users. She has been working for the Release since she left university eight years ago. She works mainly on the telephones, and knows exactly what the current trends are. “We’re seeing more calls about heroin, undoubtedly. What we get calls about does vary according to what’s being written about in the press, but in the last year, we’ve seen an increase in heroin use among young people. There’s more of it around and the prices have dropped slightly.” Release is a drugs charity, but of a special kind. It’s a source of information, legal advice and counselling for the curious and the desperate, an independent lifeline for those affected by drugs. It also runs a telephone helpline which receives over 20,000 calls a year. Callers aren’t all heavy users or addicts. Some people call because they’re facing a drugs screen at work, some people call because they are worried about a friend, partner or relative, some people call for legal advice. Release deal with all aspects of the drug problem. Yet despite being faced with such difficult and painful calls from drug addicts, Catherine believes that having a non-judgmental attitude is the most important thing about being drugs counsellor. “It’s about not judging people for their drug use, not trying to assign blame for the problems people get themselves into through their drug use,” she said. “Drug users are acutely sensitive that maybe people will say ‘it’s your fault, you got yourself into this mess, anybody could know that by taking heroin, you can get into problems’. I think that is the most important thing: not to judge.” Counsellors are also expected to have a balanced view about drug taking. “You need to understand that there are positive reasons for why people use drugs as well as bad ones. People wouldn’t use drugs unless there were nice things about that experience. “You also have to be willing to listen to people and not impose your own experiences about drug use.” Many counsellors and volunteers at Release are themselves ex-drug addicts. “Just because something was right for one person doesn’t mean that it’s going to be right for another person,” she pointed out. Release also deals with prescription drug abuse, although other helplines focus solely on illicit drug use. This can be a problem, especially because according to Catherine, there are large amount of people currently addicted to prescribed benzodiapezine tranquillisers, who aren’t being properly diagnosed. “We talk to people who were first prescribed benzodiapezine tranquillisers as long as 20 years ago. Other lines don’t engage in talking to tranquilliser users, and they often find it hard to find someone to talk to.” As to why doctors issue repeat prescriptions to patients who have become dependent on tranquillisers, Perez-Phillips believes that doctors are pushed for time, and find it simpler to prescribed than to talk to their patients about their condition. She is also worried about the difficulties some people have in getting treatment for drug addiction. “There can be waiting lists for people to get into treatments and that’s really worrying. I think that when someone decides that they want some help, they should be able to do that quickly and not have to wait, sometimes three months for an appointment.” The Prime Minister has not mentioned improving treatment facilities for drug addicts in his plans for tackling the drugs problem. The government is also opposed to changes in the law, but Release believe that change is necessary and could be beneficial. “We would like to see a review of the law and a Royal Commission to look at drugs legislation,” Perez-Phillips said, “but we’re not being prescriptive - I don’t think we can be. We just want to law to be looked at because it’s not working.” © 1997 MSN News UK