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UK: Hellawell departs with warning of teenage drug use

Ian Burrell

The Independent

Friday 03 Aug 2001

---
The outgoing advisor to the Government on drugs, Keith Hellawell, used his
final report yesterday to warn that cocaine use was on the increase and
that new research had uncovered worrying evidence of increased drug-taking
among children aged 11 to 15.

Mr Hellawell said that he had not been sacked as the United Kingdom's
anti-drugs co-ordinator by David Blunkett, the Home Secretary, as has been
suggested, but had asked to step down from the office. He said: "I was
happy to move on. I had been 40 years in public service."

Mr Hellawell, who was receiving a £106,000 annual salary, will negotiate a
part-time advisory role when Mr Blunkett returns from holiday in Majorca.

The Home Secretary indicated soon after the election that he wished to take
charge of drugs matters. The anti-drugs role will now be filled by a Home
Office minister.

Mr Hellawell, who was only three years into the 10-year anti-drugs strategy
that he had drawn up for the Government, defended his record yesterday on
tackling the problem of drug-taking and abuse.

He said a "framework and common agenda" for tackling drugs had been set up
and that the Government could be "proud that these are in place".

He added that drugs treatment programmes had been successful in that they
were "massively" reducing crime, and that drug misuse in prisons had been
cut by half.

In his final annual report, Mr Hellawell said the authorities had seized
Class-A drugs to the street value of £410m last year, an increase of 4 per
cent. He also said there was a 17.5 per cent increase in the number of
people dealt with for supplying Class-A drugs.

But he said: "Although drug use among the general population appears to be
fairly stable, there are worrying signs that cocaine use is becoming more
common."

Mr Hellawell said that cocaine was no longer associated only with "pop
stars and models" because suppliers were targeting a wider market. He said
the challenge for the Government was to explain the dangers of cocaine to
"young people and clubbers who believe this is the clean drug".

Mr Hellawell also signalled his disappointment at evidence showing growing
drug experimentation among schoolchildren. The drugs tsar had previously
claimed that young people were becoming less attracted to drugs because
they were being given more information about their effects.

But in the annual report he said: "The small but consistent increase in the
numbers of 11 to 15-year-olds who report taking drugs is of particular
concern." He said he had been given "conflicting evidence".

Earlier research by Exeter University showing a fall in drugs use by
schoolchildren was at odds with new findings in a Government schools survey
showing increased drug-taking in the past year.

Mr Hellawell said he could "see nothing wrong" with a pilot project being
conducted by the Metropolitan Police in the south London borough of Lambeth
to allow people found in possession of cannabis to escape with a verbal
warning.

But he insisted that there was no prospect of cannabis being legalised,
except where derivatives were proved to have medicinal value. Mr Hellawell
also said that people calling for a reform of the law on soft drugs were
from a "fairly limited quarter" and that international commitments would
ensure that "cannabis for the foreseeable future will remain an illegal
substance".

 

 

 

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