Scottish Daily Mail

DRUG NEEDLE TERROR: NOW WOMEN HIT BACK

Girls’ Night In protests will see students boycott clubs across the UK

- By Eleanor Harding and Andy Dolan

FEMAlE students across the country will start boycotting clubs from today in protest at the number of girls being stabbed with drugged needles on nights out.

The Girls’ Night in campaign will begin in Southampto­n tonight and spread across 43 university towns and cities over the next fortnight.

it comes in response to a reported rise in drinks being ‘spiked’ and a new alarming trend of girls being injected unknowingl­y with drugs.

Victims have become violently ill while out and only realised they had been injected when they found ‘pin prick’ marks on their bodies.

Those taking part in the boycott will stay at home on a designated night to raise awareness of the attacks and encourage venues to improve security.

Yesterday, Nottingham­shire Police said it was investigat­ing 15 reports of alleged injection spikings made this month. And West Midlands Police

‘Dreaded call for a parent’

I have no memory of the night at all. When I woke up, I was shaking a considerab­le amount and I felt very embarrasse­d. Not knowing what happened to me is a very scary idea

said it had received one report where the circumstan­ces ‘appear to match the descriptio­n of someone being spiked by injection’.

Several other women claim they have been spiked in Dundee, Edinburgh, Glasgow and liverpool.

The drugs, which are believed to be sedatives, make victims more vulnerable to assault and police admitted this week that there was probably a ‘sexual motive’ to the attacks.

A number of injection victims have already come forward, including 18-year-old leah Wolstenhol­me.

Yesterday her mother, Karen, told iTV’s Good Morning Britain that the Nottingham Trent student became ‘disorienta­ted’ and ‘sick’ while out in the city and later discovered a red pin-prick mark on her wrist.

Describing it as ‘that dreaded call for a parent’, she added: ‘[She] wasn’t leah. She wasn’t talking any sense and was just scared really.

‘it was a surprise to her. She had heard of this happening before but she didn’t think that it would happen to her. it was just really scary. it was a very scary moment.’

Molly Robinson, 19, also claimed that she was spiked at a flat party only a day after moving to university. She told BBC Breakfast: ‘i have no memory of the night whatsoever which is quite a terrifying and daunting experience in itself. i remember making dinner very early on in the evening and then it cuts to the morning after and that’s it.’

After becoming separated from her friends, she said they found her ‘completely unintellig­ible’ an hour later.

‘My friends said the state i was in when they last saw me and the state i was in when they found me was completely incomparab­le and completely inconsiste­nt to the very little alcohol i’d consumed earlier on in the evening,’ she said.

The next morning, Miss Robinson

said she felt ‘physically unwell’, adding: ‘I was shaking a considerab­le amount and I felt lots of different mental emotions.

‘I was very embarrasse­d. It was people I just met and the second day of meeting them they see me in that state. Not knowing what was happening in those hours I was missing is a very scary idea.’

But Miss Robinson said she did not report what happened as she was still ‘working through that in my mind’.

The boycotts over the next week will take place in cities including Oxford, Cambridge and York as well as in Manchester, Exeter and

Bristol. Edinburgh, Durham and Nottingham have also said they will be joining the campaign.

The Not On My Campus UK group, which is helping to coordinate the boycotts, said: ‘We must recognise spiking is not an incident that occurs just during freshers’ weeks and then disappears until next year.

‘It impacts students throughout the year, and we need to be working collaborat­ively to help promote a safer nightlife for all.’

Last night, Kate Nicholls, chief executive of UK Hospitalit­y, which represents bars and clubs, condemned the spikings as ‘despicable and cowardly behaviour’. She added: ‘We will work with authoritie­s to find relevant solutions and expect the police to take appropriat­e action. Hospitalit­y venues have stringent measures in place to keep guests and staff safe but will redouble their efforts.’

In Glasgow, a nightclub where a woman was allegedly spiked by injection has vowed to carry out random body searches. Police launched an investigat­ion into the alleged incident at Nice N Sleazy last Thursday.

Club bosses said they are implementi­ng precaution­ary measures including body searches, bag searches and ensuring no drinks are left unattended.

In Edinburgh, another club at the centre of an alleged needle spiking has said it wants ‘to ensure the safety of customers and to provide reassuranc­e for attending events’. The Liquid Rooms pledged to conduct bag and random body searches.

Meanwhile, Dundee nightclub Captain’s Cabin said it was taking an allegation a woman had been spiked via injection there ‘very seriously’. The club has recruited female stewards and will be conducting ‘more thorough’ searches.

Universiti­es have also introduced measures to prevent students from having their drinks spiked.

St Andrews University will be conducting random drinks testing, patrols of its venues and training of staff, while Glasgow University’s student bodies have also promised tighter security and increased surveillan­ce at their venues.

Police officers in plain clothes are also likely to be deployed in nightclubs across the country.

‘She wasn’t talking any sense’

 ?? ?? Speaking out: Molly Robinson
Speaking out: Molly Robinson

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