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UK: Parents say heroin and ecstasy should be legal

Paul Waugh, Deputy Political Editor

The Independent

Wednesday 13 Mar 2002

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Government urged to radically overhaul drugs laws as UN agencies warn of the
mental problems facing children


Parents whose children became victims of drug abuse urged the Government
yesterday to legalise cannabis, heroin and ecstasy to make them safer.

Three parents, including one whose son died from adulterated heroin, told
the House of Commons Home Affairs Select Committee that a radical overhaul
of the British drug laws was urgently needed.

Fulton Gillespie, 63, Tina Williams, 52, and Hope Humphrys, 57, said that
the current system was failing young people and wider society. They gave
evidence to the committee as part of its seven-month investigation into
drugs, which was set up at Downing Street's request.

The inquiry is expected to back the downgrading of ecstasy and an end to
prosecutions for cannabis possession when it publishes its report next
month.

Mr Gillespie, from Cambridge, gave a moving account of the "absolute hell"
endured by those involved in drug abuse, as well as their families.

Mr Gillespie, whose 33-year-old son Scott died of a heroin overdose two
years ago, said that drugs had to be taken out of the hands of criminals.

"I can assure you there are very few things in life that concentrate the
mind more than losing a child. So I had to think about this very, very
thoroughly," he said.

"Until my son became involved in drugs, I have to confess I was one of those
people who said 'build more prisons, get more police and if they want to
kill themselves, fine, chuck away the key'.

"But I have had to think about it really hard. I eventually came to the
conclusion that the only way that I could see would be to legalise all
drugs. I'm convinced that he is dead because of the law."

Mr Gillespie said his son had been "stupid" to start using heroin in the
first place and revealed that he had spent five weeks in prison because he
had stolen to buy drugs.

On his release from prison, his body could not take the normal dose of
heroin and the fix he had taken was toxic.

"I believe my son would be alive today if all drugs were legalised and
controlled because he would have had no need to steal and would not have
been in prison, the heroin would have been controlled and therefore not
impure. Proper treatment would also have been available," he said.

Mrs Williams, from Stockton-on-Tees, criticised the current support system
for heroin addicts, which led her to set up her own group, Parents and
Addicts Against Narcotics in the Community (Panic).

When she discovered her 32-year-old son was a heroin addict, there was a
total lack of support. "I just wish that help could have been there sooner
because he now has nerve damage and thrombosis, but at least he has
survived," she said.

She added that her son's thrombosis had been caused by the prescription of
methadone, which she said was not the right treatment for all addicts. "If
that hasn't worked then we need to look at the prescription of pure heroin,"
she said.

Mrs Humphrys, from Taunton, Somerset, told the committee how her student son
was jailed for two-and-a-half years after admitting the possession of
ecstasy tablets.

She said the classification of drugs needed to be clearer and the concept of
a dealer needed to be defined. "Social supply is not a form of evil, it
would be like buying a round of drinks today."

Paul Flynn, Labour MP for Newport West, said after the committee meeting:
"The only parents that the media normally quotes are the parents of Leah
Betts. These eloquent testimonies offered a refreshing change of outlook on
the whole issue. They said that they wanted to take control of the drugs,
the manufacture and the marketing, out of the hands of the criminals in
order to reduce harm. I'm delighted the committee invited them."




 

 

 

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