Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Drugs decriminal­isation ‘may reduce fatalities’

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AC TOR Br i a n Cox h a s s a id decriminal­isation may be the best way of reducing the number of drug-related fatalities in his home city of Dundee.

A total of 109 people died in

Tayside last year from drug-related causes – 66 of them in Dundee itself.

Across Scotland, 1,187 deaths were recorded.

Cox told the Daily Record he believes decriminal­ising drugs may help reduce the harm caused and the number of people falling into addiction.

He said: “I don’t know what the solution is because, tragically, it’s into fourth and fifth generation addiction.

“It’s also because of such abuse that has gone on, creating elements that have polluted the situation.

“I long to see Dundee reflect the town’s improvemen­ts on its people.

That’s why I think drugs should be decriminal­ised, but also I think one has to look at what is causing drug addiction.

“It has been going on from generation to generation and it is something we really need to attend to

– how to rehabilita­te people.”

The actor said Dundee has reinvented itself thanks to its creative industries and the arrival of the V&A, but said more needs to be done to help those battling drug addiction.

He said: “Dundee is a credit because it has fought its way back into place.

“It has done it through the video game industry, through the universiti­es and the artistic hub that

Dundee has become.

“I never thought it would be a city of creation but it is and that’s extraordin­ary, but we have to help the people.

“Dundee needs to solve its innercity problem, which is plagued by heroin addiction.”

He added that he regards decriminal­isation as a “good idea”.

He said: “The problem is there is always an element of being subversive. That is the feeling when you take drugs. If we legalise, we eradicate that subversive element.”

The 73-year-old also said “social engineerin­g” has contribute­d to the drug problem in Scotland.

He said: “They created housing schemes in Dundee that seemed to be forces for good but they weren’t because they cut people off from the city centre. By doing that they disenfranc­hised them.

“This happened in Dundee in the 1950s and we are seeing the effects on people.”

 ??  ?? Brian Cox
Brian Cox

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