News (Media Awareness Project) - Spain: Britain Examines Success Of Drug 'Shooting Galleries' |
Title: | Spain: Britain Examines Success Of Drug 'Shooting Galleries' |
Published On: | 2001-11-24 |
Source: | Independent (UK) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-25 03:49:48 |
BRITAIN EXAMINES SUCCESS OF DRUG 'SHOOTING GALLERIES'
The sprawling shanty town of Las Barranquillas is a dusty 20-minute walk
along a bumpy dirt track from the nearest bus stop on Madrid's southern
fringes.
It is also the nearest thing Europe has to a state-sanctioned drug
hypermarket. Up to 5,000 Spaniards come every day to buy heroin and cocaine
from a dealer's slum. Whatever the hour, people trail by on foot; many bent
double. Others arrive in unofficial taxis driven by drug users who charge a
fare equal to the price of a dose.
The narcosala, or shooting gallery, has been such a success that on
Thursday an emergency shelter will open, offering hot showers, beds, a
laundry and food for up to 200 homeless users more accustomed to shooting
up in the street. Such "shooting galleries" are being examined by the
authorities in Britain. This week, chief constables and the
Superintendents' Association backed the setting up of rooms where addicts
can test the quality of a drug and inject in hygienic conditions under
medical care.
In Las Barranquillas, amid shanties made out of rubbish, with no running
water and electricity tapped illegally from a distant mains cable, the
local authorities offer users the chance to buy drugs safe in the knowledge
that minimum conditions of health and safety will be met.
"The centre is designed to offer help in this terrible environment. We have
to be here to offer these people some dignity and try to help them escape
from this underworld if they want to," said Jose Manuel Torrecillo,
director of Madrid's anti-drug agency, which set up the scheme.
Juan Carlos, 32, has been injecting heroin for 15 years. Despairing of
finding a vein in his limbs, he has been shooting into his groin. The
doctor at the centre tried to help him find a vein, and showed him to a
private room with distilled water, a disposable syringe, antiseptic wipes,
a spoon and a lighter.
The pioneering experiment, introduced in May last year, offers 10 cubicles
where users can inject themselves with fresh syringes, analyse the quality
of their drug dose and take advice from doctors, nurses and social workers
on hand-to-treat sores, infections, bronchitis, pneumonia and dehydration.
The centre provides resuscitation for those who overdose. Inaki Arrieta,
one of the five doctors, said that of nearly 200 overdoses treated, "most
would have ended up dead if we hadn't been here".
Health workers go among the shanties handing out syringes and condoms. Dr
Torrecillo said: "It's a question of public health. We need to provide not
just somewhere where they can inject safely, but where people totally
marginalised from society have access to health care that is the right of
every Spaniard."
After a slow start among people suspicious of the authorities, the 24-hour
drug rooms have become accepted throughout Las Barranquillas.
Ramon Mayoral is old at 30, has hepatitis, tuberculosis and is HIV
positive. He is a machaca, someone so far gone that he lives only to shoot
up, running dealers' errands in exchange for a line, insulted even by
children. He clings to life by selling syringes at 80p each.
Apart from the infections transmitted by used syringes, cases of malaria
and even dengue fever have occurred in Las Barranquillas, which the health
services fear could spread to the general public.
Other than that, the shooting gallery has achieved its modest aims. "We
cannot improve the situation of drug dependency. But for those who cannot
change their habits we can at least improve the conditions in which they
inject, and reduce the risk of overdose and infections," Dr Torrecillo said.
Alberto Ruiz Gallardon, the conservative regional President, pressed ahead
with the scheme amid misgivings from his own Popular Party. "We believe
addicts are not criminals but ill; our aim is to save lives, and bring as
many people as possible into the healthcare network," he said.
In Britain, the Home Office refused to rule out the idea of shooting
galleries, insisting that while there were no plans to set any up "at the
moment", officials were "watching with interest" the use of heroin
injecting rooms in countries including Spain and Germany.
Such rooms are part of a wider debate on drugs in Britain that has seen
calls for a radical shift in policy from sections of the police force.
After moves to warn rather than arrest people for cannabis possession, the
commander of the south London borough of Lambeth had also adopted a low-key
approach to the rave drug ecstasy.
Proposals for a more liberal approach to ecstasy possession were backed by
the Association of Chief Police Officers this week, with chief constables
supporting the downgrading of the drug from class A to class B.
However, Brian Paddick, Lambeth's commander, was swiftly and publicly
rebuked by the Metropolitan Police Commissioner for saying that arresting
people with small quantities of the drug was a "waste of resources", and
the Government certainly seems unwilling to move so swiftly on harder drugs.
Whether it has the courage to follow Spain's pragmatic approach to the
problem remains to be seen.
The sprawling shanty town of Las Barranquillas is a dusty 20-minute walk
along a bumpy dirt track from the nearest bus stop on Madrid's southern
fringes.
It is also the nearest thing Europe has to a state-sanctioned drug
hypermarket. Up to 5,000 Spaniards come every day to buy heroin and cocaine
from a dealer's slum. Whatever the hour, people trail by on foot; many bent
double. Others arrive in unofficial taxis driven by drug users who charge a
fare equal to the price of a dose.
The narcosala, or shooting gallery, has been such a success that on
Thursday an emergency shelter will open, offering hot showers, beds, a
laundry and food for up to 200 homeless users more accustomed to shooting
up in the street. Such "shooting galleries" are being examined by the
authorities in Britain. This week, chief constables and the
Superintendents' Association backed the setting up of rooms where addicts
can test the quality of a drug and inject in hygienic conditions under
medical care.
In Las Barranquillas, amid shanties made out of rubbish, with no running
water and electricity tapped illegally from a distant mains cable, the
local authorities offer users the chance to buy drugs safe in the knowledge
that minimum conditions of health and safety will be met.
"The centre is designed to offer help in this terrible environment. We have
to be here to offer these people some dignity and try to help them escape
from this underworld if they want to," said Jose Manuel Torrecillo,
director of Madrid's anti-drug agency, which set up the scheme.
Juan Carlos, 32, has been injecting heroin for 15 years. Despairing of
finding a vein in his limbs, he has been shooting into his groin. The
doctor at the centre tried to help him find a vein, and showed him to a
private room with distilled water, a disposable syringe, antiseptic wipes,
a spoon and a lighter.
The pioneering experiment, introduced in May last year, offers 10 cubicles
where users can inject themselves with fresh syringes, analyse the quality
of their drug dose and take advice from doctors, nurses and social workers
on hand-to-treat sores, infections, bronchitis, pneumonia and dehydration.
The centre provides resuscitation for those who overdose. Inaki Arrieta,
one of the five doctors, said that of nearly 200 overdoses treated, "most
would have ended up dead if we hadn't been here".
Health workers go among the shanties handing out syringes and condoms. Dr
Torrecillo said: "It's a question of public health. We need to provide not
just somewhere where they can inject safely, but where people totally
marginalised from society have access to health care that is the right of
every Spaniard."
After a slow start among people suspicious of the authorities, the 24-hour
drug rooms have become accepted throughout Las Barranquillas.
Ramon Mayoral is old at 30, has hepatitis, tuberculosis and is HIV
positive. He is a machaca, someone so far gone that he lives only to shoot
up, running dealers' errands in exchange for a line, insulted even by
children. He clings to life by selling syringes at 80p each.
Apart from the infections transmitted by used syringes, cases of malaria
and even dengue fever have occurred in Las Barranquillas, which the health
services fear could spread to the general public.
Other than that, the shooting gallery has achieved its modest aims. "We
cannot improve the situation of drug dependency. But for those who cannot
change their habits we can at least improve the conditions in which they
inject, and reduce the risk of overdose and infections," Dr Torrecillo said.
Alberto Ruiz Gallardon, the conservative regional President, pressed ahead
with the scheme amid misgivings from his own Popular Party. "We believe
addicts are not criminals but ill; our aim is to save lives, and bring as
many people as possible into the healthcare network," he said.
In Britain, the Home Office refused to rule out the idea of shooting
galleries, insisting that while there were no plans to set any up "at the
moment", officials were "watching with interest" the use of heroin
injecting rooms in countries including Spain and Germany.
Such rooms are part of a wider debate on drugs in Britain that has seen
calls for a radical shift in policy from sections of the police force.
After moves to warn rather than arrest people for cannabis possession, the
commander of the south London borough of Lambeth had also adopted a low-key
approach to the rave drug ecstasy.
Proposals for a more liberal approach to ecstasy possession were backed by
the Association of Chief Police Officers this week, with chief constables
supporting the downgrading of the drug from class A to class B.
However, Brian Paddick, Lambeth's commander, was swiftly and publicly
rebuked by the Metropolitan Police Commissioner for saying that arresting
people with small quantities of the drug was a "waste of resources", and
the Government certainly seems unwilling to move so swiftly on harder drugs.
Whether it has the courage to follow Spain's pragmatic approach to the
problem remains to be seen.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...