Thursday 4 March 2010

Cocaine in the UK

In a report published today, the House of Commons Select Committee on Home Affairs claimed that cocaine use is growing in Britain, and has become a normal part of life for many people. It calls for increased efforts to be directed at both demand reduction and the international traffic that supplies the drug. The report has initiated a moral panic reminiscent of that which greeted the rise of the country’s first cocaine culture during the First World War and the early 1920s. The national alarm was a prominent factor in the passing of Britain’s first prohibitionist legislation.


In the Daily Mail, Conservative Home Affairs spokesman James Brokenshire (aptly named to carry the banner of ‘Broken Britain’) commented that it is “preposterous” that a line of cocaine is now supposedly cheaper than a coffee in London, while citing the ease with which Johnny Foreigner can slip across the UK’s “porous borders” as the reason for the prevalence of cocaine. He blames the labour government for this state of affairs, while neatly linking the issues of drugs and outsiders—in time-honoured fashion. The Times concentrates more on the role of celebrities in glamorising the drug by ‘getting away with’ its use.

In the Report itself, it’s interesting that Keith Vaz MP, Chair of the Committee, said: “There can be no relenting in the fight against cocaine trafficking. The international trade in cocaine causes untold human misery and social and environmental destruction.” He then lists the issues: the exploitation of drug mules, the destruction of rainforest and health problems for users. The first two of these can be laid squarely at the door, not of cocaine, but of the misguided (and, in the long run, quite disastrous) ways in which 20th century governments tried to deal with the problem of drugs. A regulated drugs market would solve both. As to the third point, again, prohibition has certainly exacerbated the health issues of cocaine use, since the adulterants mentioned by the Report (anaesthetics, animal worming agents and carcinogens) would not exist if legal quality controls were put in place. Despite the Report’s statements to the contrary, many people are fully aware that cocaine can and does cause health problems in its own right, and, if it is to be used at all, is best used sparingly. While fully acknowledging the risks involved with the drug, however, it is difficult to see how these are lessened by leaving its trade in the hands of gangsters.

What the Report does not do is to get to grips with the fundamental issue: cocaine and other drugs are a by-product of globalised consumerism, which works by providing people with goods and services that they want to buy. Drugs remain a curious anomaly in this system, inadequately controlled by an antiquated and discredited set of laws. While drug fashions move in historical cycles, drug use is certainly here to stay; and, like all industries and markets, requires effective forms of regulation to manage the conduct of the participants.

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