Pubdate: Mon, Sept 27, 1999 Source: Express, Express on Sunday (UK) Contact: Anthony Bevins, Political Editor BLAIR: I'M SCARED FOR MY CHILDREN PM Declares War On Drug Crime TONY Blair yesterday admitted his fears for his children over drugs - and pledged to tackle the problem head on. In a frank admission, he said: "I'm petrified about drugs, for the sake of my own children and other people's children. "People are petrified about it, they're frightened about it, they're worried about it. What we have got to do is take measures that move the whole policy up several gears in order to tackle this." He promised an urgent Crime and Justice Bill to give the police power to test arrested suspects for drugs. This could provide the evidence for officers to oppose bail for high-risk drug-takers who might re-offend to feed their habit. Action had been "ducked" for too long, said Mr Blair on the first day of Labour's centenary conference in Bournemouth. No Government had yet "woken up" to the problem, he said. Tackling it would form the centrepiece of the Queen's Speech programme for the coming year's parliamentary session. "One of the biggest social problems we have in this country today is crime and drugs and if we don't tackle it, then we are not tackling what I find people are talking about, what I think about for my own children day in and day out. And I think, fundamentally, we've got to change gear on this issue," he told BBC television's Breakfast with Frost. Citing one "terrifying statistic", Mr Blair, who has three children of school age, said: "In some inner-city areas today, 50 per cent of those arrested have drugs in their system. "A very large proportion of the crimes committed in Britain are drugs-related." Home Secretary Jack Straw said that Mr Blair had already announced a target of halving drug-related crime within the next decade. Home Office research last year showed that almost two-thirds of people arrested in five areas had at least one illegal drug in their-system and 28 per cent were on Clsss A drugs such as heroin and cocaine. Nearly half of those arrested said that their drug habit was linked to their offence - and the heroin and cocaine users were stealing to the tune of between UKP10,000 and UKP2O,000 a year to pay for their drug supplies. In addition to police testing of arrested suspects, the Government is also expected to extend random drugs testing from prisons to people on probation, and to expand the current UKP20milllon programme of treatment for offenders on drugs. The other, more political message from Mr Blair to his party activists was that the Labour Government was sticking to its fundamental principle of standing for the many not the few - but that it needed discipline and prudence to deliver the goods. That iron law of Labour finance will be repeated by Chancellor Gordon Brown in a Bournemouth debate on the economy this afternoon. Mr Brown will say that Labour's aim is full employment - "high and sustainable levels of employment - a goal now within our reach for the 21st century". The reference to the long-term goal of full employment - one of the most cherished targets inherited from Old Labour is designed to strike a chord with party members and trade union activists. Mr Brown will be making a flying visit to Bournemouth from IMF and World Bank talks in Washington. He will be telling the conference that economic prudence has brought record lows for inflation, interest rates and falling unemployment. Yesterday Mr Blair declared: "If we run the tight and disciplined economic policy we're running at the moment, we'll get the three years of the largest-ever investment in schools and hospitals coming in now, and then we'll be able in the three years after that, to get substantial additional sums." That would mean a commitment to a possible repeat of the current, three-year, additional spending of UKP40billion in schools and hospitals - for the three years after the next election. That extra spending could be used to ease the issues that continue to drive, or "motivate", Mr Blair - such as extra money for nurses and a better living standard for pensioners. Confessing that stories of pensioners' hardship "tug at the heartstrings", Mr Blair said that there was much still to do. and he would not rest until it was done. "That's what I am here for;" he said, "because these are real people living real lives of hardship." But he would not spend money that had not first been earned. "I think back on Labour governments in the past, and they came into office, they spent a lot of money for the first two years, and they spent the next three years cutting back. I don't want to do that." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D