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UK: Why Eton has its own drug rehab programme

Sophie Goodchild and Jonathan Owen

The Independent on Sunday

Sunday 18 Dec 2005

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Eton has turned out distinguished law-makers, record-breaking sportsmen
and prime ministers for centuries, as well as grooming future kings.

But Britain's most prestigious public school has now gained a remarkable
new distinction, setting up a rehabilitation programme for its
privileged pupils. The Berkshire college, whose former pupils include
the Tory leader David Cameron, has even employed a counsellor from the
Priory in a bid to curb drug use at the UKP24,000-a- year school.

This unprecedented step, where students who admit to using drugs are
offered therapy instead of expulsion, is in response to concerns about
the widespread access that teenagers now have to illegal drugs,
especially cocaine and cannabis.

The new, progressive approach is also being adopted across the country
by other elite schools, including Millfield and Winchester, who admit
that zero-tolerance policies fail.

Over the past 10 years, at least a dozen pupils have been expelled from
Eton for drug use under their old hardline policies. Three years ago
Prince Harry admitted that he had taken cannabis during his Eton school
holiday.

There have been no expulsions since the introduction of Eton's "softly,
softly" approach, said Dr Robert Stephenson, the lower master, who is in
charge of Eton's anti-drugs policy. The number of pupils testing
positive for illegal substances has reduced "dramatically". He stressed
that the new rules did not apply to pupils found dealing or in the act
of taking drugs.

"In the past, if a boy even admitted to drug use then they would have
been expelled," said Dr Stephenson. "Now, they are sent to me and we
discuss the situation. I don't think we could ever claim to be 100 per
cent drugs free. We're fighting a battle to make our boys understand
there is no such thing as a safe drug."

The aim of this approach is to identify at an early age children and
teenagers who are at risk of drug addiction, before they can develop a
long-term habit or slide into serious drug abuse.

Behind closed doors, students who own up to their drug use are asked to
sign a special contract agreeing to undergo testing. A master then takes
a hair sample and sends it to a Home Office laboratory.

Those with serious problems are offered talking therapy - a technique
already credited for reforming drug addicts - where a trained expert
encourages the boy to discuss the root cause of their addiction.

Although Eton declined to give exact figures, it confirmed that "a
number" of boys were currently signed up to drug-testing contracts after
experimenting with drugs. In one recent case, a pupil who had tried
cocaine was sent to a treatment clinic outside the college because he
was believed to have an addictive personality.

Former pupils who spoke to The Independent on Sunday described Eton as a
"magnet" for dealers who know that the privileged pupils have plenty of
money to spend.

Tom Seidler, who first became involved in drug-taking while at the
college, revealed that pupils would fill in "shopping lists" requesting
their drugs of choice, including cannabis, amphetamines, LSD and ecstasy.

The 29-year-old went to jail at the age of 19 after returning to the
school and being found in the grounds with cannabis and speed. He now
sells bibles.

Mr Seidler said that he thought that drugs would help him fulfil his aim
in life - to have fun. By the time he left the school, he was smoking
"weed" up to five times a day and taking LSD at weekends.

"People have a lot of money to spend at Eton. They would pay by cash in
advance," said the reformed addict who spent six months at Onley Young
Offenders Institute. "Someone would come round with a shopping list for
half-term and we filled in our requests. Sometimes the total order was
in excess of UKP500.

"Prison made me realise that I had messed up what others never had. Most
are born into a hard life."

Bim Afolami, an Old Etonian and Oxford undergraduate, said a core of
around 20 boys smoked cannabis in his year and would secretly roll
joints in fields near the school. During his time at the boarding
school, the zero-tolerance approach to drugs resulted in a close friend
being expelled.

"He lost his place at Oxford. It was such a shame that his life was
messed up for one mistake," said the 19-year-old, who believes the new
approach is more "flexible, supportive and sensible".

"Because Eton is incredibly competitive, those who didn't feel part of
the system took drugs. They were the most unhappy at school and created
their own identity around drugs."

Additional reporting by Danielle Gusmaroli

 

 

 

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