Blair promises to tackle Britain’s drug problem

     
    Prime minister Tony Blair

    Tony Blair yesterday claimed that a whole new approach to tackling
    Britain’s drug problems was needed, writes Clare
    Jerrom.

    The prime minister highlighted that 300,000 children are growing
    up with one or both parents addicted to drugs and half of all crime
    is drug-related. He said a different approach to drug and alcohol
    abuse was required to tackle law and order problems.

    Speaking at the University of London, Blair stressed that drug
    treatment saves the economy £3 for every £1 invested.

    But while the number of treatment places were up by more than
    50,000 since 1998, the amount invested in tackling hard core drug
    addicts had doubled and the Serious Organised Crime Agency was
    focussing on drug trade, the scale of the problem was not being
    met.

    “The challenge is immense to provide a whole new national
    infrastructure capable of tackling drugs effectively – the
    big traffickers, the small street dealers, the 280,000 regular
    users of heroin or crack cocaine, the high proportion of the prison
    and offending population which are addicts,” he added.

    Blair used his speech yesterday to set out his plans to reform
    the welfare state and stressed that the big challenges facing the
    country were child care, increasing employment, public health and
    pension reform.

    He pledged to “move from a welfare state that relieves
    poverty and provides basic services to one which offers high
    quality services and the opportunity for all to fulfil their
    potential to the full”.

    The prime minister re-iterated education secretary Charles
    Clarke’s earlier promises to develop “universal, good
    quality, affordable childcare for children aged 3-14 shaped around
    parents and children’s needs”. This would include an
    expansion of provision for under-fives and give parents more choice
    between public, private and voluntary sectors including nurseries
    and childminders.

    Full proposals on new support to help parents manage work and
    life commitments would be revealed over the coming months he
    added.

    The prime minister also pledged to help people
    “trapped” on benefits and highlighted the
    government’s new approaches to helping people receiving
    incapacity benefit return to work through the Pathways to Work
    initiatives, which were hailed as a success yesterday by Alan
    Johnson, the work and pensions secretary.

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