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News (Media Awareness Project) - Ireland: Minister Is Alarmed Over Drugs Abuse By The Young
Title:Ireland: Minister Is Alarmed Over Drugs Abuse By The Young
Published On:1997-11-14
Source:Irish Times
Fetched On:2008-09-07 19:49:28
MINISTER IS ALARMED OVER DRUGS ABUSE BY THE YOUNG
By Paul Cullen, Development Correspondent

The Minister for Justice has described as "frightening" the results of an
international survey which shows that the consumption of illegal drugs by
Irish young people is among the highest in Europe.

In his first response to the report on drug use in Europe published last
week, Mr O'Donoghue said it was "particularly alarming" that drug users
tended to be relatively welloff students and young workers rather than
from disadvantaged backgrounds.

One of the most frightening conclusions was that almost four out of 10
schoolgoing teenagers in Ireland admitted to having used cannabis, twice
the average in other EU countries, he told a conference on drugs and
development in Dublin yesterday.

Mr O'Donoghue promised the Criminal Justice Bill, which was almost
finalised, would "put the drugs barons out of business".

The conference examined how economic conditions often drive farmers in
developing countries into growing the raw materials for illegal drugs, such
as coca and poppies. Mr Ken Bluestone, a researcher with the Catholic
Institute for International Relations, explained the predicament facing one
farmer he met in the highlands of Bolivia: "He can grow pineapples for 3 to
7 pence apiece. The nearest town is 20 minutes away by car, and he has only
a bicycle. So he has little chance of getting a higher price by selling for
export. Or he can grow coca, for which he gets a constant and sustained
income of £130, four times a year".

Mr Bluestone said EU policies to eradicate drug crops had failed to reduce
drug production or the dependence of poor communities on illegal drug
production and trafficking.

Aerial fumigation techniques using herbicide were damaging the health of
children, polluting the environment and killing off "innocent" crops as
well as the drugs which were the intended targets, he said.

In South America, about 30 per cent of all drug production was being
intercepted, but this figure would need to rise to 75 per cent in order to
make an impact on the supply of drugs to the West.

The Labour MEP, Ms Bernie Malone, contrasted the good news stories of the
"Celtic Tiger" with the ravages of the drug problem. "As boardrooms and
businesses celebrated unprecedented success in 1996, `Drug Dealers Ireland
Inc' was no different."

Ms Malone attacked the "reactionary bluster" of politicians when talking
about the drug problem. Simplistic solutions like the Minister's zero
tolerance stance would not solve anything, she said.

Pressed to comment on the Government's handling of refugees, Mr O'Donoghue
said Ireland's standing in the world in relation to asylumseekers was
"second to none". But a distinction had to be drawn between "genuine"
applicants for asylum and illegal immigrants.
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