Pubdate: Tue, 27 Apr 1999 Source: Scotsman (UK) Copyright: The Scotsman Publications Ltd 1999 Contact: http://www.scotsman.com/ Forum: http://www.scotsman.com/ MORAL MUDDLE IN THE DRUGS DEBATE Editorial comment IS one drug abuser's life worth more than another's? Our moral sense says no. Whether you take your text from Jesus' example in befriending prostitutes and curing lepers, or from Rabbie Burns's assertion that "a man's for a that", the message is the same: we are all equal. By this token, the death of the teenager, Leah Betts, after taking ecstasy is no more tragic than the deaths of the 80 people from heroin overdoses in Strathclyde last year. But that is not the way it is shown in the media, says Netta Maciver, the chief executive of Scotland's largest anti-drugs charity, Turning Point Scotland. She is right, of course. Leah Betts dominated the news for days, whereas dead heroin addicts are lucky to merit a few paragraphs on an inside page, unless they happen to die in a cell. Let's be honest about this. We saw in Leah an intelligent young girl who died tragically with her life ahead of her. Endless editorials were devoted to the dangers of dabbling in designer drugs. Heroin addicts are portrayed, if at all, as problem citizens - mentally ill, poor, deceitful, thieving, prostitutes, Hep C and HIV positive, victims and victimisers. They do not have a life ahead of them. Heroin is the junkie drug, used by losers. Maciver has highlighted the moral muddle at the heart of the drugs debate. Heroin is an addictive scourge. It causes untold misery to young people who use it in an unsuccessful attempt to escape from their unhappiness. Of course, ecstasy has dangers, but compared with heroin it rates as little more than a middle class moral panic. A sensible drugs policy would treat each drug according to the risk it posed to health. Criminalising the true killers, unfortunately, is impossible as we cannot end society's affair with alcohol and tobacco. What we can do is to try to redress the balance in the way we deal with illegal drugs. We can allocate resources for tackling addiction. There are 3,000 registered addicts in Grampian, and not a single drugs detox or rehab centre. We can lobby for Scotland to be given the legislative power to set its own drugs policy, independent of Westminster. And, above all, we must tackle social exclusion, which is the reason why so many young people tragically throw their lives away. - --- MAP posted-by: Patrick Henry