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UK: Cannabis and drink? So what?

The BBC

Monday 14 Jan 2002

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Young people seem completely unsurprised by the reports of that Prince
Harry has been drinking to excess and using cannabis.

The response from teenagers themselves seems to be: "That's teenagers for
you".

"It's hardly prime time news," said one.

But there was some concern that someone who is third in line to the throne
might be setting a bad example.

At Twyford Church of England High School in Ealing, west London, sixth
former Jonathan Hobson said the prince's drinking had not surprised him in
the least.

"It's what a lot of 16 year olds do," he said.

"At that age he's doing GCSEs, he's got a lot of stress, and it's a way to
go out and have a good time.

"I know a lot of 16 year olds that have done that."

Nor was he troubled by the use of cannabis.

Legalisation

"It's on the increase, they're thinking about legalising it - they're doing
trial runs in Brixton - so it's something that, again, is not shocking any
more."

He did think the prince had suffered unfair media attention because of who
he was.

But Anthony Rumble had a different view of this.

"I know people personally who do drugs, who drink under age - I have done
that myself, drinking under age - and it's not a surprising thing at all,"
he said.

"The problem is he is third in line to be the king and is it a good example
to be setting?

"People will look up to him, people will see him as a role model, and is
that something England wants to be setting as an example - their perhaps
future king takes drugs at an early age?"

Parental support

His opinion - shared by the others - was that probably most teenagers would
have tried cannabis, although they would not be regular users.

"Cannabis is not something new to most 16 year olds," said Prashant Mehta -
and Prince Harry was no different just because he was royal.

"The fact that he was caught and his dad dealt with it in a really nice
manner, when other parents would just get the whip out ... and in a
controlled way, shows that he's got the right sort of support that he needs
to get out of this problem."

He did not find it surprising that teenagers seemed to be drinking more.

"Alco pops are made for teenagers - they're not made for the whisky
drinkers. They are made to lure teenagers into alcohol.

"It's not prime time news."

Limits

And it was not necessarily a problem: Drinking became not an addiction but
a social thing, he said.

Matthew Grant said that when he was 16 he had known people who had drunk
and tried drugs.

"I'm not going to say it's OK, but a lot of people do it. The danger is
when they progress onto harder drugs."

But usually there came a point when people had tried it all.

"Then you know your limits and you know about them, and once you've done
that you realise that you don't have to drink loads and you don't have to
smoke loads to enjoy yourself.

"When people are 15 or 16 then they have matured and if they are drinking
in a stable environment then it's OK."

Tolerance

The school's co-ordinator for personal, social and health education, Roz
Tully, said its first response if it found a student was drunk or had been
taking drugs would be to contact the parents.

The school did not operate a "zero tolerance" policy of instant expulsion.

"We try to keep them in school to try to help them get over whatever
problem they have got," she said.

"That's a general policy in education."

Saying "don't do it" was unrealistic because teenagers would try things
anyway - especially in an affluent area such as Ealing.

But a shift downwards in the age at which children were experimenting had
emerged in children's English and drama work, she said.

A parents' evening was being held to alert them to the issues.

 

 

 

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