Pubdate: Tue, 23 Nov 1999
Source: Irish Times (Ireland)
Copyright: 1999 The Irish Times
Contact:  11-15 D'Olier St, Dublin 2, Ireland
Fax: + 353 1 671 9407
Website: http://www.ireland.com/
Author: Denis Staunton, in Berlin

IRISH YOUTH 'MORE EXPOSED' TO DRUGS

Irish teenagers are twice as likely to have sampled heroin than most young
Europeans, according to a report by the EU drugs agency, and four out of
every 10 Irish 16-year-olds have tried cannabis.

The report from the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction
published in Berlin yesterday concludes that heroin remains Europe's
biggest problem drug, although 10 times as many Europeans have used cannabis.

Although the scale of the drugs problem in the Republic is unremarkable by
European standards, Irish and British schoolchildren are at greater risk of
being exposed to drugs. While almost 40 per cent of Irish 16-year-olds have
smoked a joint, fewer than 5 per cent of young Portuguese have tried cannabis.

Although fewer than 1 per cent of young Europeans have sampled heroin, more
than 2 per cent of Irish 16-year-olds have tried the drug.

"I think childhood ends earlier in Britain and Ireland than in southern
Europe, so that young people are exposed to these risks much sooner," said
Mr Richard Hartnell, one of the analysts who compiled the report.

The trend in most European countries is away from legal repression and
towards treatment and rehabilitation. The report shows that some countries
with the most liberal approach to drugs are showing most success.

Fewer than 1 per cent of Irish intravenous drug-users are infected with
HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, and Mr Hartnell played down a sharp rise
in the number of drug-related deaths in the Republic.

"One reason for the steep rising curve is the fact that Ireland
under-reported such deaths in the past. Most of these deaths are from
overdoses and, although every death is a cause for concern, I would not be
as concerned as the graph might lead you to believe," he said.

Most of the 6,000 to 7,000 drug-related deaths in the EU each year are from
heroin overdoses and, although use of the drug appears to have stabilised,
the problem is spreading from the cities.

Ecstasy use is falling in many parts of Europe as young people are
disenchanted with the quality of pills on the dance scene. Many ecstasy
users have turned to drugs such as amphetamines, the most commonly used
drug after cannabis.

"Ecstasy in many countries seems to have peaked as a cultural phenomenon,"
Mr Hartnell said.

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