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Blinkered Approach To Drug Problem Hugh Robertson Letters, Evening Express, Aberdeen Wednesday 19 May 1999 Having read several articles on heroin in the UK recently, I can't help but wonder why we ever stopped prescribing heroin to registered addicts -- a practice now having successful trials in Switzerland and the Netherlands. The Netherlands have a comparatively minor problem with heroin compared to Britain and most other Western European countries. One of the main points of the policy which has enabled this relative success was the setting up of 'coffee shops' over 20 years ago, along with a sensible education policy. The 'coffee shops' effectively decriminalised cannabis and separated the market for cannabis from that of hard drugs. Another of the mainstays of their policy is to treat addiction as a medical and social problem and not a criminal problem -- which has led to the trial prescribing of heroin. The long term policies have resulted in having a relatively small, stable number of heroin addicts but they also have the lowest rate of teenage use of cannabis in the western world. The results of the Swiss trials are extremely encouraging with lowered rates of homelessness and unemployment and a fall in drug-acquisition-related crime taking part. So just why are this country's political parties so blinkered when it comes to this issue? Hugh Robertson
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