Source: Scotsman (UK) Contact: http://www.scotsman.com/ Forum: http://www.scotsman.com/ Copyright: The Scotsman Publications Ltd Pubdate: 5 January 1999 Author: Conal Urqhuart ANTI-DRUGS CHIEF ATTACKS 'ARROGANCE' OF SUBSTANCE ABUSE BY PROFESSIONAL CLASSES PROFESSIONAL people who take drugs are as great a threat to society as any other substance abusers, the Government's anti-drugs campaign co-ordinator claimed yesterday. Keith Hellawell said that he was appalled by the arrogance of people who felt they had the right to buy illegal drugs because they could afford it. "There is this arrogance, I would call it an intellectual arrogance, among one group of people. They feel that because they are not causing any damage to other people, which they are, they have a right to take drugs. "Because they do not have to commit crime to feed their habit they also feel they have a right to take drugs. "If they are driving vehicles they could be causing damage, if they are dealing with my pension fund they could be causing damage. "Certainly if they are doing it in the workplace they could be doing damage to themselves and others," he said. Mr Hellawell claimed that there appeared to be an acceptance of drug use in popular culture which manifested itself in celebrities talking openly about their experiences with drugs. "I wish that these people would recognise the danger and the damage that they are causing themselves and to other people. It isn't a joke. It is deadly serious. These substances cause them damage and the consequences of them taking drugs causes other people damage," he said. Random drug testing in the financial sector and the City has found that roughly 15 per cent of people tested had taken drugs, usually cannabis or cocaine. The level was three times the average of other industries. Alistair Ramsay, the chief executive of Scotland Against Drugs, agreed with Mr Hellawell that drug abuse among the professional classes was a social problem. He said: "Drug use spans the community and is not the sole provenance of any one area." Since being appointed to head the Government's campaign against drug use, Mr Hellawell has attacked drug use in a variety of areas. He recently endorsed the sacking of a Blue Peter presenter who was exposed as a drug abuser by the News of the World. Mr Hellawell said the BBC were correct to fire Richard Bacon because it sent the message to children that drug use was unacceptable. Mr Hellawell has attacked certain pop stars for sending out positive messages about drugs saying that were bound to influence the younger generation. Speaking on Radio 4's Today programme yesterday, he said that the United States' Just Say No policy had been effective but the country was now facing similar problems to the UK. "I think that the number of people who use drugs in the US has halved over the last ten years," he said. "The worrying problem that they have is the same as we have, the growing number of young people who are becoming involved in hard drugs. Plenty of them will have their first experience of drugs with heroin and substances of that nature." Mr Hellawell has spent a year in his post as UK Drugs Co-ordinator and Special Adviser to the Prime Minister. He said that he has managed to achieve many of his objectives in raising the level of debate about drug use and succeeded in bringing "the issue out into an open forum, to recognise that there are many social ills that lead to young people getting involved in drugs, to recognise that some of the young adult culture of getting involved with drugs in the recreational context is something that I think has not been brought out into the open before". He added: "There are no simple solutions - legalisation will not resolve the problem." On the same programme, Paul Flynn, the Labour MP for Newport West, renewed his call for the decriminalisation of cannabis. "The most dangerous thing about cannabis is the fact that it's illegal and our young people, the majority of whom are using cannabis, experimenting in some form, have to go to the criminal markets to get it," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Pat Dolan