Pubdate: Sun, 09 Aug 1998 Source: Scotland On Sunday Section: Opinion Contact: NO COHERENCE ON DRUGS THE tragic death of another young girl from an ecstasy overdose last week brings into sharp focus, once more, the fact that Scotland has a drugs problem which is defying all attempts to defeat it. However, the death of 18-year-old Julia Dawes must surely prompt us to look yet again at what, precisely, we are doing to tackle this menace in our society. Today, the leaders of the organisation which is supposed to be in the vanguard of this operation - Scotland Against Drugs - complain that they are being frustrated by a lack of a coherent national policy on combating drug misuse and call for tougher police action against dealers and for the appointment of a drugs tsar operating exclusively in Scotland. While SAD and its 'Just Say No' approach are not without their critics, there should be little doubt that the words of David Macauley, its executive director, and Sir Tom Farmer, its chairman, deserve to spark a renewed national debate on drugs and the dangers they pose to our young people. There has been little serious and coordinated thinking on the issue since the then secretary of state, Michael Forsyth, launched SAD - amid a fanfare of publicity and goodwill - two years ago. The present situation is, to say the least, confused. SAD says one thing while others involved in the fight against drugs preach a different message. This is a hopeless situation and one which, by sending out conflicting messages, negates the whole idea of a national policy. On Friday, the Secretary of State announced that he was to spend an extra 1.5m over three years on community-based anti-drugs projects sponsored by SAD. It must be said that while this may well be a welcome addition, there is little point in simply throwing money at schemes if there is no overall, agreed national policy. It is time for the government to stop prevaricating; the arguments over drug strategy in Scotland have been simmering for too long now and a properly thought-out, coherent approach - where everyone in the country is pulling in the same direction - is long overdue. - --- Checked-by: Melodi Cornett