The Scotsman

Drug facility could go ahead ‘if police extend relaxed approach’

- By CHRIS MARSHALL cmarshall@scotsman.com

Extending the use of police warnings to drugs other than cannabis could be a way of opening a controvers­ial consumptio­n facility, it has been claimed.

The Home Office has ruled out the creation of a drug consumptio­n room in Glasgow – an idea backed by the local health board, council and Scottish Government – where users could take illegal substances in safe and sterile surroundin­gs rather than injecting in the street.

Health experts yesterday told Westminste­r’s Scottish Affairs Committee that those using needle exchanges are currently not pursued by the police.

And Elinor Dickie, public health intelligen­ce adviser at NHS Health Scotland, said the use of Recorded Police Warnings (RPWS) could be extended.

Introduced in 2016, RPWS are used for a range of minor offences which would previously have been reported to prosecutor­s, including cannabis possession.

Asked if there was a way of “testing the boundaries” of the current drugs legislatio­n, Ms Dickie said: “Police Scotland have introduced recorded warnings for small amounts of cannabison­ly–nootherdru­gs.

“In terms of the issue of drug consumptio­n rooms and the possession of drugs on the premises, exploring whether the warnings could be applied to other drugs may be one means to get around that issue of possession.

“We already see that around injecting equipment services provision. Police surveillan­ce around these facilities has been deemed not in the public interest…”

Research published earlier this year in The Lancet said factors such as homelessne­ss and cocaine injecting had helped create a “perfect storm” in Glasgow, with over 10 per cent of intravenou­s drug users in the city centre now infected with HIV.

But speaking earlier this week, Home Secretary Sajid Javid said he opposed the plan for a consumptio­n room because of concerns it would increase drug use.

Giving evidence to MPS yesterday, Dr Saket Priyadarsh­i, medical director for addictions at NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde, said evidence from elsewhere in the world showed consumptio­n rooms do not increase drug taking.

Meanwhile, the Scottish Government’s public health minister Joe Fitzpatric­k has visited a similar facility in Paris.

A new law in France protects staff at the Espace Gaia from prosecutio­n and tolerates the consumptio­n of illicit products inside.

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