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Drugs swoops 'have little impact' | Drugs swoops 'have little impact' |
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Police are fighting a losing battle against drugs crime, with seizures having little impact on reducing supply or demand, research has suggested. | |
The UK Drug Policy Commission said despite the large sums of money spent tackling the problem, traditional police tactics were not working. | |
It said the £5.3bn British drugs market was too "fluid" for law enforcement agencies to cut supply. | |
It added more should be done to reduce the effects of drugs on communities. | |
A Home Office spokesperson said: "The government agrees that enforcement in isolation is not effective." name="top"> href="#quote" /> class="bodl" href="#1">UK Drugs market: expenditure and seizuresPrice mark-ups along supply chain | |
name="top">BBC home editor Mark Easton said the report was a "very bleak assessment of where we are in what some people call the war on drugs". | |
name="top">The report, titled Tackling Drug Networks and Distribution Networks in the UK, concluded that although the amount of Class A drugs seized between 1996 and 2005 doubled, the market had proved to be "extremely resilient". | |
name="top">This was despite 12% of the heroin and 9% of the cocaine in Britain being impounded during the same period, and despite the convictions of dealers and traffickers. | |
name="top"> It is very difficult to show that increasing drug seizures actually leads to less drug-related harm David Blakey UK Drug Policy Commission class="" href="/1/hi/uk/7531387.stm">More women used as drug mules class="" href="http://newsforums.bbc.co.uk/nol/thread.jspa?forumID=5173&edition=1">Send us your comments | |
name="top">The independent think-tank said dealers were able to adapt quickly to interruptions in supply, for instance by reducing purity, enabling them to maintain their profit margins. | |
name="top">The report estimated that between 60% and 80% of drugs would need to be seized to put major traffickers out of business - yet crackdowns on such a scale have never been achieved in the UK. | |
name="top">It went so far as to warn that police crackdowns could have a negative effect on the problem. | |
name="top">They could threaten public safety and health by "altering the drug users' behaviour and potentiallyâ¦setting up violent drug gang conflicts as police move dealers from one area to another", said our correspondent. | |
name="top">Instead, the study's authors suggested the government concentrated on the "collateral damage" of the trade - sex markets, gangs, human trafficking, corruption, drug-related crime and anti-social behaviour. | |
name="top">They added that resources should be focused on disrupting "street-level markets" and tackling violence and intimidation in communities. | |
name="top">The criminal justice costs of class A drugs alone are estimated at £4bn a year. | |
name="top">Education | |
name="top">Tim McSweeney, one of the report's authors, said: "We were struck by just how little evidence there is to show that the hundreds of millions of pounds spent on UK enforcement each year has made a sustainable impact." | |
name="top">David Blakey, of the UK Drug Policy Commission, said enforcement agencies tended to be judged by the amount they had managed to capture. | |
name="top">"This is a pity as it is very difficult to show that increasing drug seizures actually leads to less drug-related harm," he added. | |
name="top">The Home Office said seizures were only part of the government's approach, with intervention programmes getting 1,000 offenders into drug treatment each week. | |
"Many of the report's recommendations are already being implemented," the spokesperson added. | |
"Our drugs strategy encompasses enforcement, prevention, education and treatment." | |
Our correspondent said while few politicians would suggest that less should be spent on being tough on drugs, the government's own 10-year drugs strategy was already cautious in its claims on the effectiveness of law enforcement. | |
"There is a recognition that we "have to do more than just catch people and lock them up, we have to do something else, it's not working," he added. | |
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