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Police warn of a cocaine 'epidemic' as drug seizures rise by 50 per cent



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Published Date: 04 June 2008
NEW evidence that Scotland is in the grip of a cocaine epidemic has emerged with figures revealing seizures of the drug have increased by 50 per cent in two years.
The number of successful cocaine raids by police rose from 1,302 in 2005-6 to 1,692 last year. In 2004-5, there were 870 seizures of the class A drug.

This rise in cocaine hauls bucks an overall downward trend in drug seizures, which last year fe
ll 17 per cent.

One senior police officer told The Scotsman the soaring numbers indicated that more people were taking the drug.

Gordon Meldrum, director general of the Scottish Crime and Drug Enforcement Agency, also said the figures appeared to confirm that traffickers were targeting Scotland and the rest of Europe with vast amounts of cocaine.

"This probably reflects an increase in both supply and demand," he said.

"The success that US drug enforcement officers have had in North America has displaced a lot of cocaine into Europe. Inevitably, some of it is reaching Scotland.

"There is also evidence that the number of cocaine users is growing. The stereotype cocaine user is very much middle-class. But the reality is cocaine use is now across the board."

David Liddle, director of the Scottish Drugs Forum, said: "We are seeing an increasing number of people using cocaine, both within the existing problematic drug-users and also recreational users."

He said Scotland was suffering from a shortage of treatment services for heavy cocaine users, whose use is often hidden for years because they can afford to keep buying the drug.

Kenny MacAskill, the justice secretary, said the increased number of hard drug seizures showed police were taking strong enforcement action against the drugs.

Mr MacAskill added: "The Scottish police service is working with national and international agencies to stem the flow of drugs into the country.

"However, the Scottish Government is clear that enforcement alone will not stop the misery that drugs inflict on our communities.

"Our new drugs strategy … contains a commitment to strengthen existing powers, to seize assets from drug dealers and also maps out a fresh approach to drugs education."

Seizures of crack cocaine trebled over the two years, while cannabis hauls fell 31 per cent, from 19,319 to 13,364, since 2005-6.

However, the number of cannabis plants recovered jumped six-fold from 3,200 to 20,000.

The Conservatives said the fall in cannabis seizures coincided with a downgrading of the drug, now to be reclassified in 2009.

Annabel Goldie, the Tory leader, also described as "alarming" the increase in Class A seizures.

"These figures are more evidence of the deepening malaise sweeping Scotland," she said.

"Drug abuse is destroying lives, wrecking families and devastating communities.

"We need to learn lessons from Sweden, which enforces comprehensive restrictions on the possession and supply of all illegal drugs."

Liberal Democrat Margaret Smith said: "The trebling of crack seizures in Grampian is particularly concerning.

"Police forces across Scotland should be congratulated for their work in identifying and cracking down on those who carry drugs.

"We do, however, believe that this must be backed up by action to support addicts to break the habit and stop addiction in the first place."

Scotland is now a producer of illegal highs

DETAILS of drug seizures in Scotland, published yesterday, reveal dramatic changes in the market for narcotics.

Perhaps the most striking change is the explosion in home-grown cannabis.

Organised crime groups from China and Vietnam have moved into Scotland in the past few years, setting up scores of cannabis factories in farms, houses, garages and warehouses.

Yesterday's figures reveal that 20,249 plants were discovered by police in 2006-7 – compared with only 3,269 the previous year.

It means Scotland has effectively for the first time become a producer of illegal drugs.

One reason why cocaine seizures have increased so dramatically may be that police are getting better at targeting the dealers.

But most experts believe the reality is that an increasing pattern of seizures is more likely to indicate that more drugs are circulating.

This appears to be the case with cocaine. Despite a doubling in demand over the past seven years, the price has not increased.

Suppliers are meeting that demand with increased flows of cocaine from South America.

Equally worrying are fresh signs that crack cocaine, which is highly addictive, has taken a firmer hold in the North-east of Scotland.





The full article contains 757 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 03 June 2008 10:15 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Drugs policy
 
1

Beth Boyle,

NY 04/06/2008 04:28:51
Never before has there been more of a reason to return to the Kirk and change the fabric of society. Binge Drinking, Knife Crime, Drugs, and much more all stem from a break down in morality. All of this New Age nonsense is breaking down the whole of the Western world. A little God with your coffee would change that.
2

an interested party,

04/06/2008 07:20:44
with or without your fantasy sky god, we still have troops in the middle east, nothing changes does it

have to say the polis paint a terrible picture
perhaps they want more funding or something
the fabric of society is far from breaking down
3

Rulesbutnotrulers,

Federation, not separation 04/06/2008 07:24:39
How many more drug horrors before we undercut and so cut out the pushers and barons by supplying such drugs through self financing NHS clinics? Let's separate drug abuse from crime and so slowly begin to end the drug problem.
4

Citylocal Fife,

Fife News 04/06/2008 07:59:06
Dealing...

1st offence 25 years

2nd offence death penalty

Repeat until symptoms disappear
5

Thistledhu,

04/06/2008 08:18:51
The fact that Drug smugglers are comeing to europe as its getting increasingly hard to move drugs into the US says it all.
We need a real border force built along the lines of the French Gendarme's or the Italien calibenerie.

Along with the irony that we send Royal Navy ships to do Anti drug smugleing patrols in the caribean while due to MOD cash shortages, ships that should be patroling home waters stay in port.
6

Beth Boyle,

NY 04/06/2008 08:32:29
#2 an interested party, what does the war have to do with this topic? The war happened because Blair did not have the guts to say no to George Bush. Bush could not have done this without the UK. This war is a war about oil not about religion. George Bush says he is a Christian but he is not. It's just politically expedient to profess to be a right wing fundamentalist. Religion does work well to keep the troops fight though. Lie to them and make them pray together. It works like a charm. That isn't real Christianity either that is just a mind game.
7

Thistledhu,

04/06/2008 09:16:53
is it too hard to stick to the subject?
8

an interested party,

04/06/2008 10:09:38
I brought up the war as it is as relevant as the invocation of a fantasy sky god to fix the drug problem

on an other matter the porous Mexican and Canadian borders are no way well enough patrolled to have an effect on the ingress of drugs to the USA, they fly the stuff in in planes its not like its a sealed country by any stretch of the imagination.

we can however thank the USA for the increase in the availability of drugs as they have effectively financed the growers over the last 30 years

the profits to be made way outstrip the risks

a new sensible approach to remove the cash that can be made from drugs and therefore the criminal element would be a start, only if you really care for our citizens erm sorry subjects

but there is to much money to be made in the war on drugs so tough sh1t people you will just have to suffer it while the dealers (arms) and the suppliers (technology) make there money from us all, not to mention the drugs producers
9

Thistledhu,

04/06/2008 11:02:54
if its so easy for the drug smugglers when the mexico /us border is on there doorstep why are they heading here
10

Thistledhu,

04/06/2008 11:03:39
or is it instead of hug a hood cuddle a junky?
11

Alternative (High Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 04/06/2008 12:59:23
Hold on just a moment.

One of the functions of the police is to catch drug dealers and seize their drugs. It seems that they are managing to do this. I would say that is good news!
12

Mcsnagpile,

04/06/2008 13:26:24
Better with the crack in the sky when you die
Than a nose on the ground when your around.

Nothing like a bit of crack on the Bloggs.
13

Jock MacTamson 2,

Highlands 04/06/2008 15:03:19
The RAND Corporation study found that additional domestic
law enforcement efforts cost 15 times as much as treatment to
achieve the same reduction in societal costs.

Source: Rydell, C.P. & Everingham, S.S., Controlling Cocaine,
Prepared for the Office of National Drug Control Policy and the
United States Army (Santa Monica, CA: Drug Policy Research Center,
RAND Corporation, 1994), p. xvi.
14

Jock MacTamson 2,

Highlands 04/06/2008 15:04:33
A 1998 report by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
and the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA)
estimated the economic costs of illegal drug abuse in the United
States to be $97.66 billion in 1992. Sixty percent (60%) of drug
costs were due to drug-related law enforcement, incarceration and
crime. Only 3% of drug costs were from victims of drug-related crime.
15

Jock MacTamson 2,

Highlands 04/06/2008 15:05:55
Drugs is too profitable. It will never stop. Politicians cannot accept prohibition makes crime.

In 2004, a kilogram of cocaine base in Colombia typically sold
for $810 and a kilogram of cocaine typically sold for $1,713.
In Peru in 2004, a kilogram of cocaine base typically sold for
$700 and a kilogram of cocaine typically sold for $1,000. In Mexico
in 2004, a kilogram of cocaine typically sold for $7,880. In the
United States in 2001, a kilogram of cocaine typically sold for
$23,500.

Source: United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, World Drug
Report 2006 Volume 2: Statistics (Vienna, Austria: UNODC, 2006),
pp. 369-370.
16

ddmc,

04/06/2008 17:00:17
so its only taken 8 years to realise that we have shedloads of ching in every pub & club, pay attention to the queue in the toilets, although the quality is nowhere near as good as the 90's
17

ddmc,

04/06/2008 17:03:29
oops posted too soon

15 prohibition has never worked anywhere for anything, even countries like singapore where the death penalty can be given to 1st offenders still have drug smugglers.

I find it a bit of a coincedence that the 2 major class A drug producing countries have large amounts of US soldiers stationed in them, what are they guarding ?
18

Allan(handofgod137),

04/06/2008 17:51:15
#16 It's fine if you know the right people, and the siezure figures can hardly be touted as a success, when the annual amount siezed is only about 95kg, I'd bet that ammount goes up Scotlands nose in a weekend.
19

Jock MacTamson 2,

Highlands 04/06/2008 18:05:53
#17 & #18

I totally agree.

Most people do not even know the British governments involvement in the Opium Wars as the worlds largest narcotics dealers less than 100 years ago. But why let the truth or history get in the way of a good political message.

"Soceity is screw up but it is not the fault of the Government nor the Police but it is caused by drugs. This is why we must Tax all your money to ensure we can keep fighting."

All the while we have British soldiers guarding Opium fields in Afghanistan.
20

an interested party,

04/06/2008 18:36:55
and has Afghanistan not just had it biggest opium yields ever in the last 4 years

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn
/content/article/2006/12/01/AR2006120101654.html

Opium production in Afghanistan, which provides more than 90 percent of the world's heroin, broke all records in 2006, reaching a historic high despite ongoing U.S.-sponsored eradication efforts, the Bush administration reported yesterday.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opium_production_in_Afghanistan


but lets not let facts get in the way of a good bit of rehtoric

21

mobocaster,

Aberdeen 04/06/2008 22:08:51
I have wondered if it is merely coincidence but IME, the rise in use/social acceptance of Cocaine in my part of the world seems to have rocketed since the smoking ban came-in & the number of places where they may have previously turned a blind eye to the odd toke on a joint could no longer do so, even in the bogs.

After that, I must say I was staggered by the number & sheer variety of people who began sneaking away to snort powder.

Just a thought?

Either way, I simply cannot see how increasingly hard line & moralistic approaches to any kind of drug problem are anything other than doomed to failure.

 

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