The Scotsman

Cross-party pressure on Javid to lift ‘shooting galleries’ ban

● Home Secretary told of good public health results in other countries

- By HARRIET LINE newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Home Secretary Sajid Javid has been urged by a group of cross-party MPS and peers to sanction drug consumptio­n rooms, or “shooting galleries”.

Tory Crispin Blunt, Labour’s Jeff Smith and crossbench peer Baroness Meacher, along with seven Police and Crime Commission­ers, have written to Mr Javid urging him to allow councils to proceed with pilot schemes.

Drug consumptio­n rooms, also known as overdose prevention centres (OPCS), provide addicts with a safe place to consume their drugs, with sterilised equipment, medical help and advice on hand.

The All-party Parliament­ary Group for Drug Policy Reform, which is co-chaired by the three politician­s, said in the letter that OPCS have been establishe­d in many countries with “good public health results” and an “absence of the feared negative consequenc­es.

“We and many of our colleagues have been assessing their value as part of local strategies to reduce drugrelate­d deaths and infections (primarily HIV and hepatitis), as well as incidences of public disorder and needle litter,” they wrote.

“We are supportive of areas that wish to proceed with their implementa­tion. We therefore call on the Government to allow the relevant local authoritie­s the discretion to proceed with locally developed, closely evaluated pilots.”

Last week, National Records of Scotland statistics showed almost 1,200 people died from drugs in Scotland last year – the highest rate for any EU country.

Scotland now has a drugdeath rate nearly three times that of the UK as a whole.

Of the deaths recorded last year, 72 per cent were male and 37 per cent were aged between 33 and 44.

Former minister Mr Blunt said: “The internatio­nal evidence is clear – overdose prevention centres save lives.

“We are facing a crisis of drug overdose deaths and cannot afford to reject initiative­s that will help bring the death rate down. Policymake­rs must urgently escape the simplicity of ‘drugs are bad, they are banned’ and engage in evidence-based policy and the complexiti­es about how to reduce crime and save lives.”

Opposition whip Mr Smith added: “Instead of condemning and marginalis­ing people who use drugs, we need to support and encourage them into treatment.”

A Home Office spokesman said:“theukgover­nmenthas been clear that there is no legal framework for the provision of drug consumptio­n rooms and there are no plans to introduce them.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom