The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

‘Supercharg­ed’ police taskforce to fight drugs

Forces will work together to disrupt flow of drugs from cities to smaller communitie­s

- STEFAN MORKIS

Police have been told to “supercharg­e” enforcemen­t measures to disrupt the flow of illegal drugs to Tayside.

Forces on both sides of the border will be tasked with destroying “county lines” drug runs from large cities to smaller communitie­s.

Such illicit networks are said to be a major contributo­r to Dundee’s horrendous drug death toll.

Speaking at this week’s second major drugs summit in Glasgow, Kit Malthouse, the UK Government’s minister for crime, policing, said: “There’s a taskforce within Dundee looking at this issue, thinking about how we can supercharg­e treatment.

“If we can ally that with supercharg­ed enforcemen­t and disruption of supply we might create a space to see some improvemen­t.”

Other speakers stressed the need to treat the drugs problem in Scotland as a health issue, rather than a criminal one.

Police Scotland and English forces will be asked to find new ways to disrupt county lines drug gangs bringing heroin into Dundee.

Kit Malthouse, the UK Government’s minister for crime, policing and the fire services, told the UK Government’s drugs summit at Glasgow SEC yesterday, “supercharg­ing” enforcemen­t and treatment will help reverse the rising number of drugrelate­d deaths in Dundee.

There were 66 drug-related fatalities in Dundee in 2018 and last year’s figure is expected to surpass that record high.

The Dundee Drugs Commission was set up to look at ways to reverse the trend and Mr Malthouse said he believes disrupting the supply of hard drugs into the city will bring tangible results.

He wants Police Scotland to work with English forces such as Merseyside to disrupt county lines gangs, which are operated from large cities and use young people to traffick drugs to smaller communitie­s around the country.

He said: “One of the things I am going to propose today is that we have an England-scotland policing table, so we get Police Scotland and some of those forces where they’ve got gangs running lines into Scotland to sit down and talk about what we can do, and how to interfere with the business operation.

“Things like the pure transporta­tion of drugs one way and cash the other.”

Mr Malthouse said Dundee could benefit from targeted operations.

“We’re running a pilot in Merseyside showing some success disrupting county lines, so I’m keen to stimulate activity there, particular­ly around somewhere like Dundee.

“It’s a discrete community, it’s got an acute problem.

“Obviously there’s a taskforce within Dundee looking at this issue, thinking about how we can supercharg­e treatment.

“If we can ally that with supercharg­ed enforcemen­t and disruption of supply, we might create a space to see some improvemen­t.”

The commission also heard from Dame Carol Black’s report on drug use and its impact in the UK.

Her wide-ranging review found drug users spend around £9.4 billion on illegal drugs each year, with around £4bn of that spent on opiates, but that the total cost to society is around £20bn.

Dame Carol said problem drug users spent around £19,000 each year on addictive substances and more must be done to help them.

She told delegates yesterday: “If you had cancer and diabetes, we would try very hard to treat you with the best drugs available as quickly as possible to get on top of the problem.

“I ask you to think what we might do for people with very different and complex, chronic conditions.

“I do believe addiction to be a chronic condition.”

Her comments were backed by Scotland’s chief medical officer, Catherine Calderwood, who wants yesterday’s summit to be a “turning point” in treating addiction as a health, rather than criminal, issue.

She said: “We have treated them like criminals and pushed them through the prison system.

“We do not treat any other person with a chronic condition like this.

“I hope this summit marks a turning point where start treating these people as people, rather than pushing them out of the system.”

An extra £20 million in Scottish Government funding will be made available for drug rehabilita­tion and mental health support for addicts, Public Health Minister Joe Fitzpatric­k announced. The funding, £7.3m of which will come from the health budget, will aim to support the Drug Deaths Taskforce and deliver more Nhs-funded rehabilita­tion beds.

Mr Malthouse also addressed safe consumptio­n rooms, saying it would be up to Police Scotland to prosecute anyone who used them and warning health staff could face serious charges if a user died.

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Dame Carol Black speaking at the UK Drugs Summit being held at the SEC in Glasgow.
Picture: PA. Dame Carol Black speaking at the UK Drugs Summit being held at the SEC in Glasgow.

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