
Now health minister backs adding crack room to controversial 'shooting gallery' facility
Neil Gray told MPs that the existing Glasgow drug consumption room pilot has 'limitations' because it only allows addicts to inject.
He said there is 'international evidence' to support extending it to include an inhalation room, and the Scottish Government and Lord Advocate would consider the issue if there is an application by the operator of The Thistle.
He also indicated support for considering further drug consumption rooms before the pilot scheme is evaluated.
At Westminster's Scottish Affairs Committee yesterday, Mr Gray said: 'I understand because of the changing nature of substance dependency that the current establishment of the facility on an injection facility basis may provide limitations, and there is international evidence to point to the relative success of inhalation facilities.'
Bosses of the £2.3million 'safer consumption centre' in Glasgow first outlined proposals to set up an inhalation room for smoking crack cocaine within the facility in March.
They hoped this would attract more addicts to the Scottish Government-financed clinic, which is run by the Glasgow City Council and NHS bosses.
Laura Zeballos, deputy director of the Scottish Government's drugs policy division, yesterday said: 'There is international evidence that inhalation rooms are standard components of safer consumption facilities, we see that in many of the facilities in Germany, in Denmark and France, where their role in preventing respiratory harm is noted in the evidence base as a result.'
Annemarie Ward, chief executive of Faces and Voices of Recovery, said: 'I'm deeply concerned. What Neil Gray is now floating is a further normalisation of drug use, this time by providing a publicly sanctioned space for people to inhale crack cocaine. Let's call this what it is: state-enabled self-destruction.
'The fact that this expansion is even being discussed before there's been any independent analysis of the Glasgow facility's impact should worry everyone.
'We are sprinting ahead with a radical public health experiment while bypassing basic evidence, democratic accountability, and common sense.
'The original injection facility was sold as a tightly controlled pilot — now we're talking about rolling out more sites, even as the drug death toll continues to mount and treatment access remains abysmal.
'We're giving out crack pipes, but we won't fund real rehab. '
Mr Gray said there is interest from other parts of Scotland for drug consumption rooms and they need to come forward with proposals.
He said: 'That does not necessitate having to wait until the end of the pilot; that could happen before then.'
Scottish Conservative drugs spokesman Annie Wells said: 'Neil Gray needs to drop this reckless plan and urgently confirm that his government will wait for a full report on their flagship facility before agreeing to support any more consumption rooms.'
A Home Office minister yesterday said the Labour Government will not support drug consumption rooms and won't change laws to allow more to operate.
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The Guardian
9 minutes ago
- The Guardian
The Tories are on the brink of annihilation in Wales – and it holds a lesson for Westminster politicians
By any measure, Kemi Badenoch's leadership of the Conservative party is not in a good place. In the last few months alone, she has been told 'her days are numbered', that she is in 'Liz Truss territory' and that she is 'hitting a new record low'. This is not a hostile audience. These criticisms come from the Telegraph, the Spectator and the Daily Express, outlets that have traditionally turned a blind eye to the most egregious Conservative leadership failings, like a blinkered parent who refuses to accept the repeated reports from teachers that their child is a bully. It's clear that what Badenoch is doing is not working. She needs to change course, not just for her own sake, but for the continued existence of her party as a political entity. In case this isn't obvious to her already (just 10% of people in the UK see her as a PM in waiting), there is a really handy example of what will happen to the Conservative party if it keeps being a Reform tribute act – the Welsh Conservative party. If you haven't paid any attention to the Welsh Conservative party, don't blame yourself, because hardly anyone in Wales has either. I have had the privilege of reporting on the Welsh Tories for a decade and they are the embodiment of all the challenges and failings of the current UK party. And when I say 'privilege', I mean it. Journalistically, it has been like shooting fish in a barrel, such is the level of incompetence exhibited by the Welsh Conservatives. But a gain for the humble hack is a loss for the people of Wales. Since devolution, Wales has been desperate for a sensible centre-right alternative that could genuinely challenge Welsh Labour, whose record is more patchy than Boris Johnson's account of Partygate. Instead, the people of Cymru have been condemned to a Welsh Conservative party that has preferred to dabble in Nigel Farage cosplay rather than genuine opposition. A party that could soon be all but wiped out in Wales. So what lessons can Badenoch learn from the situation her colleagues find themselves in across Offa's Dyke? Well, the first concerns demographics. The Welsh Conservative party is literally dying out. According to a study by Cardiff University's Wales Governance Centre, in 2024 fewer than 10% of people aged under 65 in Wales voted for the Conservatives. In fact, 10% of the party's 2019 voters had passed away by the time of the 2024 election (the figure for Labour was 3%). If this trend continues, 40% of Tory voters in Cymru will have died by the next election. But surely these voters are being replaced? Well, no. If you want to see how hard the Welsh Conservatives are finding it to recruit younger people, then look no further than a fringe meeting that was held at their party conference in May. I remember looking through the programme and seeing that an event by the Welsh Young Conservatives was discussing how to attract more young people. They defined 'young' as under 45. That same conference underlined another problem: that the Conservatives scream incompetence right now. For one thing, Badenoch herself began her speech by saying how 'wonderful' it was 'to meet so many MSPs'. In Wales we have MSs (Senedd members); not MSPs (members of the Scottish parliament). The auto captions all over the hall also wrote 'whales' rather than 'Wales' throughout all of the speeches. And the lack of compassion and hope from the current Conservative party was hilariously encapsulated in the subtitles to the speech of Darren Millar, the Welsh Tory leader in the Senedd, which translated 'We are pro-roads, not just cycle paths' into 'We are pro-roads, not just psychopaths'. It also doesn't help that the Conservatives can't agree about who their Welsh leader is. In the constitution of the Conservative party, Badenoch is technically the leader of the Welsh Conservatives. However, Mims Davies (an MP in Sussex) is the leader of the Welsh Conservatives in Westminster, and Millar is the leader of the Welsh Conservatives in the Senedd. But if we accept that, for all intents and purposes, Millar is the leader in Wales (given he is the only one actually in Wales), we can see how his failure of leadership (and the failures of his predecessors) offer Badenoch a stark warning. The lesson here is that trying to mirror Reform is a losing play. Millar has continued the strategy put in place by his predecessor, Andrew RT Davies, and tried to be more Farage than Farage himself in rhetoric. Davies was investigated by the Welsh parliament's standards commissioner after he told GB News: 'Welsh Labour are dishing out £1,600 to anyone who wants to rock up and claim they are crossing the Channel illegally.' To be clear, the figure he was referring to was the Welsh government's basic income pilot, which will give £1,600 a month to care leavers and included about a dozen migrant children who came to the UK alone with no family. The Welsh Tories also show what happens when you fail to put forward any credible plans for actually governing the country. Regarding the biggest challenge facing Wales, which is the NHS, the Welsh Conservatives issued a statement saying they would 'properly fund the health service'. When asked where the money would come from, they listed a string of 'Labour vanity projects' which they would cut. Unfortunately, some of these ended in 2003. In the Senedd right now, the Welsh Conservatives are the official opposition. They constitute 15 of the 60 members (25%). Polling suggests that in the Welsh election next year they will receive between 10% and 13% of the vote. The electoral system in Wales means that any party that dips under 12% could be totally wiped out. An MRP poll in May suggested that they could have as few as three seats (and this is after the Senedd will have expanded to 96 members). These projections could be Badenoch's Welsh canary in the coalmine. I suspect she will simply say the canary wasn't determined enough, and keep on tunnelling. Will Hayward is a Guardian columnist. He publishes a regular newsletter on Welsh politics and is the author of Independent Nation: Should Wales Leave the UK?


Daily Mail
9 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
I met him once during a job interview and he stalked me relentlessly - now he's being released from prison and I'm terrified he'll kill me
A woman who was relentlessly stalked and harassed by a man she only met once during a job interview has opened up about the terrifying ordeal. Jen, a recruitment consultant from the UK, bravely shared her story in the first episode of To Catch A Stalker, the latest BBC Three documentary series hosted by former Love Island star Zara McDermott. The programme follows Zara, 28, as she meets with victims of stalking and domestic abuse to highlight the devastating and long-lasting impact of these crimes. Jen revealed that her nightmare began in March 2022 when she posted a job advert online. A man, who would later become her stalker, applied for the position and was offered the job following a brief interaction. What followed was a chilling campaign of harassment and sexual text messages leaving Jen in constant fear. She said: 'I started to get texts from him, [saying] "morning. I've just started my day. It's 5am. I'm heading here and I'm gonna be stopping there.' 'And then it started to be pictures as if he was texting his best friend. I didn't respond to them. And then, they started to get a little bit personal. 'Then the texts were coming through at eight, nine, ten o'clock at night, and I was not responding to anything. But then I'd get five or six more messages. And I was waking up to loads of messages in the middle of the night.' The man would attempt to insert himself into Jen's daily life by repeatedly sending her his location and urging her to meet him, behaving as though they were in a relationship, despite having met only once. His delusional fixation quickly escalated and he sent her nude pictures of himself, leaving Jen feeling trapped and constantly on edge. He soon began sending her whispering voice messages, which deeply unnerved her and added to her growing sense of fear. One voice note said: 'My love for you is in my brain it's not in my manhood. I am the guy you are looking for, you are just not recognising it. I want you so bad, really bad.' Describing these messages, Jen said: 'The whispering was so creepy. Like, it's scary. It was then I knew that he was making porn searches for people that looked like me. I was scared of him attacking me.' Just five days after his initial text to Jen, his tone shifted dramatically. He began sending her threatening voice messages, laced with fury and intimidation. One angry voice note said: 'A young capable guy who is in love with you and you threw me overboard, for who? Who are those people, none of them care for you.' Jen went to the police on numerous occasions, armed with a substantial amount of evidence documenting the harassment. The man was arrested four times and served three short prison sentences, but each time he was released, allowing the terrifying cycle to continue. He is currently in prison, where he has spent the last eight months, but is due for release in the next few weeks. Jen now lives in constant fear that the moment he is released, he will come straight to find her. She said he has shown no respect for legal boundaries in the past. 'It's when he's coming out, it's really, really stressful,' she said. 'On one of the occasions when he came out of prison, he rang me within two hours of being released. 'So, he came straight out of prison, went straight into a shop, bought a phone and rang me. 'And he was like, 'hi baby, it's me.' When he's coming out, he's going to get in the car and he's gonna come straight here. 'He wants to break me. He said that in his interviews to the police. So I'm broken. 'The only way it may end, is if it was him or me. So, it's either me that disappears or he disappears and he's not going anywhere.' Jen's sister, Sam, says she lives in constant fear for her sibling's safety. She admits she's terrified of what could happen when he's released in a few weeks. Sam said: 'If he's out and he's free to roam, it doesn't matter to him. 'The restraining orders, none of it means anything, it doesn't register. I do think that she's in massive danger. Massive amounts of danger.' Sam revealed that her sister is no longer eating or sleeping properly due to the constant fear she lives in. Although her doctor has prescribed anti-anxiety medication and sleeping pills, Jen is too afraid to take them, worried she needs to stay alert in case the man shows up at her door. Through tears, Sam said: 'I honestly think, without intervention, he'll kill her. He won't let her go. If he gets her, he will never let her go.' Jen's story is just one of many featured in the eye-opening series, which aims to raise awareness about stalking, as well as push for greater protections and support for victims. A 'heartbroken' Zara fought back tears when she heard the harrowing account of another woman's stalking ordeal at the hands of her ex-partner. The second episode sees Zara sit down with an anonymous woman who recounted how her ex-partner stalked her after she ended the relationship. She recalled how at the start he was 'very charming, caring, I didn't even imagine there was another side to him'. However, he would make her video call him '24 hours a day, every day, morning until night'. When the woman ended the relationship things took a terrifying turn. 'The continuous harassment, being outside of my house every other day, he would cry his eyes out and make me feel bad,' she recalled. Zara asked: 'Was he calling you and texting you?' 'He would call me more than 500 times a day and I would literally chuck my phone in some corner of my house,' the woman replied. She appeared to get emotional as she described how 'he made me hate myself for being in that situation'. The woman gestured a line across her neck with her hands as she recalled what he would do outside her house, seeming to infer he was saying he would harm her. 'He didn't leave outside of my house for another five, six hours. I was terrified,' she added. Zara replied: 'That breaks my heart, hearing that.' The woman submitted video, calls and text messages to the police and revealed she would be giving a witness statement at court against him. Zara asked the woman, 'How are you feeling through this?' 'Like I'm rubbish,' she replied, as Zara held her hand. The reality star looked tearful as she continued to listen to the woman and said: 'You did not deserve any of that, you know that?' After wrapping up filming for the stalking documentary in March, Zara admitted it had been one of her 'most emotional' yet, as she praised the brave women who appeared in the programme and voiced her hope that it would open up further conversations about the issue.


BBC News
9 minutes ago
- BBC News
'Arsenal followed right processes over Partey'
Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta says he is "100%" sure the club followed the right processes when dealing with former midfielder Thomas Partey, who was under police investigation for multiple counts of rape while he was playing for the Ghana midfielder, 32, left Arsenal at the end of his contract on 30 June and four days later was charged with five counts of rape and one count of sexual offences are reported to have taken place in 2021 and 2022, the Metropolitan Police said in a statement on 4 charges involve three women, with two counts of rape relating to one woman, three counts of rape in connection to a second woman and one count of sexual assault linked to a third denies the charges and "welcomes the opportunity to finally clear his name", his lawyer has said. Detectives started a investigation in February 2022 after police first received a report of are in Singapore for their pre-season tour. They play AC Milan and Newcastle before travelling to Hong Kong to play was asked in a news conference before they play Milan on Wednesday about the situation with Partey."The club was very clear in its statement," Arteta said. "There are a lot of legal matters that are very complicated so I cannot comment on any of that." He was then asked: "A lot of fans have questions over the way in which the matter was handled by the club. Do you feel confident and comfortable that the club followed all the right processes in that?"Arteta answered: "100%, yes."Partey is expected to appear at Westminster Magistrates' Court on 5 joined Arsenal for £45m from Atletico Madrid in October made 35 appearances in the Premier League last season and scored four goals as Arsenal finished second. He also played 12 times in the Champions League as the Gunners reached the semi-finals before being knocked out by eventual winners Paris St-Germain.