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UK: Drugs proposals 'make sense'

The BBC

Wednesday 22 May 2002

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The report by a Home Office committee which recommends the downgrading of
certain drugs has been welcomed by drug treatment professionals and users.

Russell Johnson, manager of Birmingham Drugline, said the proposed
declassification of cannabis and ecstasy "made sense".

He said drug users drew a distinction between "recreational substances and
drugs such as heroin and cocaine which are associated with far greater
individual and social problems".

He also supported the report's findings that a reliance on tough legal
means to tackle drug misuse was not a success.

"Purely criminal justice intervention is not a huge deterrent because
people don't expect to get caught and also it does not allow people to make
the changes to end their drug use," he told the BBC.

"We know treatment is cost effective and it works.

"For example, spend a pound on drug treatments and you'll save £3 in the
court system."

Addict's view

The home secretary has already dismissed another of the report's proposals,
a call for safe "shooting galleries" or clean places for addicts to inject.

But the idea was supported by one former heroin user, Rachel Lewis.

She told BBC Breakfast News that it would offer a clean alternative to the
car parks and public toilets, where she used to take drugs.

"It would also reduce the risk of drug paraphernalia being left for the
public to find," she added.

She said she would support the introduction of such places on health
grounds and "not to encourage people to do it".

"People are going to do it anyway and it just makes it safer for them," she
added.

Prescribing heroin

Ian Smith works at the Edge clinic in Trafford, greater Manchester, and is
co-author of Heroin Century.

He said the MPs' proposals were a "sign of the evolution" of attitudes
towards drugs.

"It's a move away from an unwinnable war on drugs, signalling that we are
learning to live alongside drug problems," he said.

He warned that if the government adopted one of the proposals, that more
addicts be treated with diamorphine or clinical heroin, it would be costly.

Transform, a group which campaigns for effective drug policies, applauded
MPs for their "pragmatic" approach to heroin addicts.

"They have seen evidence from around the world that heroin prescribing and
supervised injecting rooms have immense benefits in terms of reducing
crime, community safety, and increasing the health of users," said
spokesman Steve Rolles.

But he added the group was disappointed the committee had stopped short of
calling for the legalisation of cannabis.

 

 

 

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