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Illicit drug use in Ireland

Illicit drug use in Ireland & Northern Ireland has been growing since the mid-1970s.[citation needed] The use by young people of psychedelic drugs, including LSD and cannabis, was recognized at that time. Opiate abuse was uncommon until the 1980s, following events in the opium production centres of Afghanistan and Iran. Government task forces and private programmes were formed to tackle increased opiate abuse. Dublin and Ballymena have been centres of increased heroin use and preventative efforts. Studies confirmed significant opiate use in the 1990s, when action to reduce harm caused by drug use became favoured. Programmes focused on controlling the spread of HIV, seen as a greater social threat than drug abuse itself.

Head shop in Dublin

Heroin edit

 
 
Signs in Dublin from the HSE displaying an "Extreme Overdose Warning" following a cluster of heroin overdoses, 2023

1970s edit

Heroin use in Ireland has always centred on Dublin, and to a lesser extent Cork city.[1] Heroin abuse became a major problem in inner-city Dublin in the late 1970s. Earlier, there was no evidence of anything more than isolated use of heroin. In December 1968, the Minister for Health, Seán Flanagan, established a working party to investigate the extent of drug abuse at the time and to advise the government. Their research, reported in 1971,[2] could not find any evidence of significant use of heroin, which they attributed to the difficulty of obtaining supplies at the time. Drug use was limited mostly to cannabis and LSD. These drugs were seen as part of student sub-culture; Hugh Byrne, a TD debating what was to be the 1977 Misuse of Drugs Act, described Trinity College Dublin as "a nest and a hive for the production of LSD [...] leaflets containing the formula of LSD have been freely sold around the campus". He blamed this activity on foreign students in areas of "advanced study".[3]

The main treatment centre for drug users was at Jervis Street Hospital. The National Drug Advisory and treatment Centre was founded there in 1969. In 1973, the Coolmine therapeutic community was founded as a voluntary body to provide a structure for people to "maintain a drug-free existence".[4]

In 1979, there was a dramatic increase in the supply of heroin to Western Europe, usually attributed to the fall of the Shah in Iran and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. This marked the start of an epidemic in inner-city Dublin.[5]

1980s edit

The number of heroin users in Dublin continued to grow in the early 1980s. The 1983 Bradshaw Report found that in north central Dublin, 10% of 15- to 24-year-olds had used heroin in the previous year; the figure was 12% for 15- to 19-year-olds, and 13% for females of the same age group. The report also confirmed Dublin as a centre for heroin use, with only three or four heroin users in Cork and Galway.[6]

Following this report, the government created a Special Governmental Task Force on Drug Abuse in April 1983. Their report recommended funding community facilities in deprived areas, but this was at odds with government policy at the time, so the report went unpublished.[7] The government's position was that drug abusers were victims of their own choices, rather than their socio-economic circumstances.[8] The Misuse of Drugs Act 1984 was enacted to provide for tougher punishments than the 1977 Act.

The 1980s also saw the rise of community groups which organised themselves to rid their local areas of drugs. Priests, politicians and even Provisional IRA members took part in residents' associations in areas of Dublin such as Fatima Mansions, the Hardwicke Street flats, St. Teresa's Gardens, and Dolphin House. Groups met to name and shame drug dealers, giving them the choice either to stop dealing or leave the area. Actions broadened to include patrols by residents, checkpoints to search vehicles for drugs, forced evictions, and other vigilante actions. These local groups got together and adopted a constitution in February 1984, naming themselves "Concerned Parents Against Drugs".[7]

The Drug Treatment Centre Board moved to Trinity Court in 1988 following the closure of Jervis Street hospital.

The most significant event of the decade was the arrival of the HIV/AIDS epidemic to Ireland. The first diagnosed case of AIDS was in 1982. Early cases before 1987 were found in homosexual men, this soon spread to intravenous drug users, overtaking cases amongst homosexual men.[9] A survey by the Department of Health in 1986 found that 30% of intravenous drug users were HIV positive.[8]

1990s edit

Ireland has a drugs problem. But beyond this simple statement we must also recognise that Ireland's drugs problem is primarily an opiates problem—mainly heroin. And beyond this, we must recognise that Ireland's heroin problem is principally a Dublin phenomenon.
Pat Rabbitte, 1996.[1]

There were an estimated 13,460 opiate users in Ireland in 1996.[10] The HIV/AIDS epidemic in Ireland was most active among intravenous drug users. Treatment in centres such as Trinity Court required a commitment from the patient to achieve abstinence from drugs. In light of the HIV epidemic, this policy was revised in 1992 to one of harm reduction.[11] This different approach recognised that the harms of drug use, such as the spread of HIV, were of a greater danger to society than drug use itself.[12] Harm reduction was implemented in the form of methadone maintenance and needle exchange programmes.

The first needle exchange opened in 1989[13] and there were about eleven others by the end of the 1990s.[14] There are now plans to offer needle exchange services at pharmacies.[15]

In the very late 1980s & the early 1990s, the Irish Republican & Revolutionary socialist paramilitary group the Irish People's Liberation Organisation or just "IPLO" for short, brought in thousands & thousands of Ecstasy pills also known as "E" & "E pills" (chemically known as (3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) ) into Ireland. According to authors Henry McDonald & Jack Holland, the IPLO became involved in drug dealing in early 1989 and at £25 per pill, the IPLO made massive profits from the drug trade.[16] The pills were bought in Amsterdam & then the IPLO smuggled their pills out from Holland, then to France along old Irish National Liberation Army (INLA) (the group the IPLO split from) arm routes & to Rosslare Europort, County Wexford, Republic of Ireland, they were then hidden & stored in a safe house in Swords, Dublin and some of the pills were sold around Dublin city, but the vast bulk of the E Pills were sold in Belfast City where the IPLO was at its strongest militarily. According to Holland & McDonald, the drugs were hidden & packed under the floorboards of camper vans and driven across Europe towards western French ports. Once in Ireland the pills were placed inside Paracetamol bottles & delivered to Belfast.[17] In October 1992 the Provisional IRA Belfast Brigade wiped out the IPLO in Belfast.[18]

Head shops edit

Head shops (Irish: siopaí siabhráin, siopaí cloigne, siopaí cnáibe, "derangement/head/hemp shops")[19][20] did exist legally in Ireland, and were reported by authorities to be opening at a rate of one per week in January 2010. Some of the shops were open 24 hours a day, serving through a hatch at night.[21] The legality of the shops was discussed in Seanad Éireann that month, with an all-party motion being passed requesting the Government to introduce legislation to regulate the sale of products.[21] One head shop in Roscommon received objections from residents two weeks after opening for business that month.

Head shops received a lot of media attention in 2010, with one doctor describing on the television programme, Prime Time, patients of his who suffered hallucinations, anxiety and psychosis after experiencing "legal highs" party powders from head shop substances.[22] Politicians weighed in, with Chris Andrews in favour of outlawing head shops while Jim McDaid said this would be a "huge mistake" which would allow illegal street dealers to thrive.[22] There was controversy and irony when a judge renowned for his strict anti-drug sentencing discovered that a premises he had rented to a business in Naas contained a head shop, and evicted the operator.[23][24][25][26]

Attacks on head shops edit

A Dublin head shop exploded and caught fire on 12 February 2010, engulfing a neighbouring building in fire and the surrounding streets and quays in smoke, causing Capel Street to be closed for the day.[27] The blaze levelled two other businesses including a sex shop, as one of Dublin's busiest streets was evacuated.[28][29] A second head shop burned down on 16 February 2010 in Dublin.[30] On 10 March 2010, two pipe bombs were found outside two separate head shops in Athlone, and Garda bomb disposal experts closed two main streets in the town. The attacks were later traced to disgruntled drug dealers.[31][32]

Another burned down on 11 March 2010 in Sligo, and an adult shop also caught fire.[33] On 16 April 2010 in Dundalk, County Louth, a head shop was set alight in a petrol bomb attack. The county is home to then Minister for Justice Dermot Ahern and hours later plans for legislation for regulation of head shops got underway.[34]

On 28 March 2010, vigilante group Republican Action Against Drugs (RAAD) claimed responsibility for planting an explosive device outside a head shop in Letterkenny, County Donegal. It was made safe by the security forces. RAAD issued a statement that it was the "first and only warning" the shop would receive; the head shop closed shortly afterwards.[35][36]

2010 legislation edit

Many head shop products became illegal in Ireland on 23 August 2010[37] when the new Criminal Justice (Psychoactive Substances) Act 2010 became law.[38] The Act empowered Gardaí to seek court orders to close head shops suspected of selling drug-like products, with the onus on the owners to prove they are not doing so.

Following this legislation, the number of head shops declined dramatically from 112 to just 12.[39]

2015 legislation edit

Before a Government order took effect in 2011, head shops had been legally selling methylethcathinone, a recreational drug. Earlier Government orders, also pursuant to the Misuse of Drugs Act, outlawed the possession of other head shop drugs like ecstasy and magic mushrooms. Stanislav Bederev, charged with methylethcathinone possession in 2012, challenged the constitutionality of such Government orders. On 10 March 2015, the Court of Appeal ruled in Bederev's favour, on the basis that the orders amounted to law-making, a power reserved for the Oireachtas. Emergency legislation to reinstate the ban on drugs previously banned by Government orders, which also include amphetamine, khat and ketamine, took effect on 12 March 2015.[40][41][42] The Court of Appeal ruling implicated pending cases involving possession of those drugs, and may potentially have led to appeals from those previously convicted of possession of those drugs.[43][44] However, in June 2016, the Supreme Court overturned the Court of Appeal's ruling, finding the original Government orders constitutional, on the basis that the Government was bound to outlaw only drugs of the same nature as those already listed in the Misuse of Drugs Act, and that the Oireachtas was given the right to annul the Government's orders if the Oireachtas so chose.[45]

Advocacy for law reform edit

The political party People Before Profit (PBP) supports Ireland moving "towards the Portuguese Model to undermine criminal gangs". It also supports the immediate decriminalisation of the possession of drugs for personal use and low-level distribution.[46] The Social Democrats also support the decriminalisation of drugs for personal use.[47] Since 30 June 2023, Ireland's Labour Party has called for the "decriminalisation of users" in regards to drugs and supports the legalisation of cannabis for recreational and medicinal use in Ireland.[48]

In 2020, as part of the government formation negotiations with Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael, the Green Party have called for sweeping reforms of Ireland's drug laws. The Green Party stated that the criminalisation of drug consumption is a counter-productive policy that perpetuates business models of organised crime and fails to address the public health impact of drugs. They believe there is a more compassionate policy based on international best practice that could be introduced within existing constraints under international law. The Green Party stated that if they got into government, which they did, they would shift drugs policy from a criminal justice approach to a public health approach.[49] In 2023, after ongoing lobbying by the Green Party and many others, the government officially announced that it would convene at Citizen's Assembly on Drug Use.[50][51][52][53]

In 2021, over 100 youth workers and former youth workers in the Republic of Ireland formed the Youth Workers Against Prohibition Ireland organisation and called for the legal regulation of all drugs in Ireland. The organisation is part of those who have signed an open letter criticising drug prohibition, which has also been signed by Irish Senators Eileen Flynn and Lynn Ruane. Signatories to the letter said that if drugs were legal and regulated the criminal market would be cut out and youth services, social services and medical services could treat the matter of drug addiction as a social, medical and health issue.[54]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b First report of the ministerial task force on measures to reduce the demand for drugs. Irish Government Stationery Office; 1996.
  2. ^ Report of working party on drug abuse. Irish Government Stationery Office; 1971.
  3. ^ Dáil debates, 1975. Volume 278, 20 February, Column 938
  4. ^ "Coolmine TC – Coolmine TC". Retrieved 29 March 2023.
  5. ^ Dean, G.; O'Hare, A.; O'Connor, A.; Kelly, M.; Kelly, G. (1985). "The opiate epidemic in Dublin 1979-1983". Irish Medical Journal. 78 (4): 107–110. PMID 3997451.
  6. ^ Bradshaw J, Dean G. Drug misuse in Ireland, 1982–1983: investigation in a north central Dublin area, and in Galway, Sligo, and Cork. The Medico-Social Research Board; 1983.
  7. ^ a b Lyder, André (2005). Pushers Out: The Inside Story of Dublin's Anti-Drugs Movement. Trafford Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4120-5099-9.
  8. ^ a b Butler S. Drug problems and drug policies in Ireland: a quarter of a century reviewed. Administration. 1991;39(3):210{235.
  9. ^ O'Kelly FD. The natural history of injecting drug use in a Dublin community (1985-1995) [MD thesis]; 2000. Department of Community Health and General Practice, Trinity College, University of Dublin.
  10. ^ Comiskey, C.; Barry, J. (2001). "A capture-recapture study of the prevalence and implications of opiate use in Dublin". European Journal of Public Health. 11 (2): 198–200. doi:10.1093/eurpub/11.2.198. hdl:2262/91866. PMID 11420811.
  11. ^ Barry, J. (2002). "Policy response to opioid misuse in Dublin". Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health. 56 (1): 6–7. doi:10.1136/jech.56.1.6. PMC 1731997. PMID 11801613.
  12. ^ National Advisory Committee on Drugs, the National Drugs Strategy Team. Needle exchange provision in Ireland; 2008.
  13. ^ Butler, S.; Mayock, P. (2005). "'An Irish solution to an Irish problem': Harm reduction and ambiguity in the drug policy of the Republic of Ireland". International Journal of Drug Policy. 16 (6): 415–422. doi:10.1016/j.drugpo.2005.07.002.
  14. ^ Dillon L, O'Brien M. Drug-related infectious diseases. In: Moran R, editor. A collection of papers on drugs issues in Ireland. Dublin: Health Research Board; 2001. pp. 50–82.
  15. ^ O'Driscoll D, Keane R. Pharmacy Needle Exchange Programme 28 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine [Conference presentation]; 2009. Needle Exchange Conference, Killarney.
  16. ^ Higgins, Kathryn; McElrath, Karen. "The Trouble with Peace: The Cease-Fires and their Impact on Drug Use among Youth in Northern Ireland". Sage Journals. SAGE Publishing. doi:10.1177/0044118X00032001003. S2CID 144709116. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  17. ^ Holland, Jack; McDonald, Henry (1994). INLA: Deadly Divisions (1994) (Paperback ed.). Torc. pp. 311–313. ISBN 978-1898142058.
  18. ^ Haverty, Dan (8 November 2019). "IRA's Night of Long Knives' part in Northern Ireland's peace process". IrishCentral. Irish Central. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  19. ^ "An tAire Gnóthaí Pobail, Comhionannais agus Gaeltachta, Pat Carey TD". Beo!.
  20. ^ Cineálacha Drugaí Drugs.ie Retrieved 29 March 2023
  21. ^ a b "Dramatic increase in 'head shops'". RTÉ. 26 January 2010.
  22. ^ a b "'Head shops' booming as row rages over legal highs". Sunday Independent. By Aislinn hughes. Sunday 7 February 2010.
  23. ^ "'Head shop' asked to quit judge's outlet". The Irish Times. Thursday, 4 February 2010.
  24. ^ "Tough Irish judge unaware he was owner of 'legal high' shop". The Belfast Telegraph. By Eimear Ni Bhraonain, Thursday, 4 February 2010.
  25. ^ "Judge owns premises rented by Naas head shop". Leinster Leader. Published Date: 4 February 2010. By Paul O'Meara.
  26. ^ "Judge left red-faced as he is forced to boot out his tenant who opened a head shop next to the courthouse"[permanent dead link]. Herald.ie. By Cormac Byrne. Thursday 4 February 2010.
  27. ^ "Head shop fire in Dublin city centre". RTÉ. Friday, 12 February 2010 12:37.
  28. ^ "Three shops destroyed in Capel St fire" 25 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine.Herald.ie. By Conor Feehan and Alan O'Keeffe. Friday 12 February, /home/moconnell06/Desktop/clongowes.net_thumb.png2010.
  29. ^ "€450,000 cash found in Dublin 'head shop' after fire". The Irish Times.
  30. ^ Fire damages Dublin 'head shop', Charlie Taylor, The Irish Times, 17 February 2010
  31. ^ 'Head shops' target of pipe bomb attack Irish Independent 11 March 2010.
  32. ^ Garda superintendent slams "reckless" pipe bomb act Westmeath Independent, 18 March 2010.
  33. ^ Sligo head shop & adult store damaged in fire, RTÉ News, 11 March 2010
  34. ^ Fire breaks out at head shop in Dundalk, Irish Times 16 April 2010
  35. ^ "Bomb threatened head shop closes - Local - Donegal Democrat". www.donegaldemocrat.ie. Archived from the original on 1 August 2012. Retrieved 22 May 2022.
  36. ^ http://www.nwipp-newspapers.com/dn/free/320204301714770.php[permanent dead link]
  37. ^ S.I. No. 401/2010 – Criminal Justice (Psychoactive Substances) Act 2010 (Commencement) Order 2010. Irish Statute Book. 17 August 2010.
  38. ^ Criminal Justice (Psychoactive Substances) Act 2010 Irish Statute Book.
  39. ^ "Irish Times - Minister seeks to ban more products sold in head shops (5 October 2011)". The Irish Times.
  40. ^ "Dáil passes emergency legislation over drug ruling". 10 March 2015 – via www.rte.ie. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  41. ^ O’Loughlin, Ann (11 March 2015). "Drugs Ruling: Law-making powers are restricted to Oireachtas". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 19 April 2019.
  42. ^ Connolly, Johnny (1 October 2015). "Misuse of Drugs (Amendment) Act 2015". Drugnet Ireland. Issue 55, Autumn 2015: 11–12. {{cite journal}}: |volume= has extra text (help)
  43. ^ Minihan, Mary; Hilliard, Mark; Gallagher, Conor. "Drugs ruling will impact on pending cases, says expert". The Irish Times. Retrieved 19 April 2019.
  44. ^ Hurst, Luke (11 March 2015). "Class-A Drugs Accidentally Legalised in Ireland". Newsweek. Retrieved 19 April 2019.
  45. ^ Courts Service of Ireland (22 June 2016). "Bederev -v- Ireland & ors : Judgments & Determinations : Courts Service of Ireland". Retrieved 19 April 2019.
  46. ^ "Drugs Policy". pbp.ie. 6 January 2022. Retrieved 9 February 2022.
  47. ^ "Drug Reform". socialdemocrats.ie. Social Democrats (Ireland). Retrieved 1 February 2024.
  48. ^ Ó Ríordáin, Aodhán (30 June 2023). "Fundamental reform of drug policy needed". labour.ie. Labour Party (Ireland). Retrieved 1 February 2024.
  49. ^ stuartclark. "The Green Party calls for drug decriminalisation in Ireland". Hotpress. Retrieved 27 February 2023.
  50. ^ Barry, Aoife (12 November 2022). "Bill to be introduced that would legalise personal use of cannabis". TheJournal.ie. Retrieved 27 February 2023.
  51. ^ "Labour Party calls for decriminalisation of drugs for personal use". The Irish Times. Retrieved 27 February 2023.
  52. ^ "'We need an evidence-based drug policy that comes from a position of harm reduction' – Neasa Hourigan TD launches Citizens' Assembly framework proposal | Green Party". www.greenparty.ie. Retrieved 27 February 2023.
  53. ^ Cunningham, Paul (14 February 2023). "Cabinet approves new Citizens' Assembly on drug use". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  54. ^ Freyne, Patrick (3 July 2021). "Legalising drugs: 'Drug use should be treated as normal adult behaviour'". The Irish Times. Retrieved 27 August 2022.

External links edit

  • Ireland Drug Report 2017
  • Prohibition has never worked anywhere, and it never will. TheJournal.ie. Published 22 January 2022.

illicit, drug, ireland, northern, ireland, been, growing, since, 1970s, citation, needed, young, people, psychedelic, drugs, including, cannabis, recognized, that, time, opiate, abuse, uncommon, until, 1980s, following, events, opium, production, centres, afgh. Illicit drug use in Ireland amp Northern Ireland has been growing since the mid 1970s citation needed The use by young people of psychedelic drugs including LSD and cannabis was recognized at that time Opiate abuse was uncommon until the 1980s following events in the opium production centres of Afghanistan and Iran Government task forces and private programmes were formed to tackle increased opiate abuse Dublin and Ballymena have been centres of increased heroin use and preventative efforts Studies confirmed significant opiate use in the 1990s when action to reduce harm caused by drug use became favoured Programmes focused on controlling the spread of HIV seen as a greater social threat than drug abuse itself Head shop in Dublin Contents 1 Heroin 1 1 1970s 1 2 1980s 1 3 1990s 2 Head shops 2 1 Attacks on head shops 2 2 2010 legislation 2 3 2015 legislation 3 Advocacy for law reform 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHeroin edit nbsp nbsp Signs in Dublin from the HSE displaying an Extreme Overdose Warning following a cluster of heroin overdoses 2023 1970s edit Heroin use in Ireland has always centred on Dublin and to a lesser extent Cork city 1 Heroin abuse became a major problem in inner city Dublin in the late 1970s Earlier there was no evidence of anything more than isolated use of heroin In December 1968 the Minister for Health Sean Flanagan established a working party to investigate the extent of drug abuse at the time and to advise the government Their research reported in 1971 2 could not find any evidence of significant use of heroin which they attributed to the difficulty of obtaining supplies at the time Drug use was limited mostly to cannabis and LSD These drugs were seen as part of student sub culture Hugh Byrne a TD debating what was to be the 1977 Misuse of Drugs Act described Trinity College Dublin as a nest and a hive for the production of LSD leaflets containing the formula of LSD have been freely sold around the campus He blamed this activity on foreign students in areas of advanced study 3 The main treatment centre for drug users was at Jervis Street Hospital The National Drug Advisory and treatment Centre was founded there in 1969 In 1973 the Coolmine therapeutic community was founded as a voluntary body to provide a structure for people to maintain a drug free existence 4 In 1979 there was a dramatic increase in the supply of heroin to Western Europe usually attributed to the fall of the Shah in Iran and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan This marked the start of an epidemic in inner city Dublin 5 1980s edit The number of heroin users in Dublin continued to grow in the early 1980s The 1983 Bradshaw Report found that in north central Dublin 10 of 15 to 24 year olds had used heroin in the previous year the figure was 12 for 15 to 19 year olds and 13 for females of the same age group The report also confirmed Dublin as a centre for heroin use with only three or four heroin users in Cork and Galway 6 Following this report the government created a Special Governmental Task Force on Drug Abuse in April 1983 Their report recommended funding community facilities in deprived areas but this was at odds with government policy at the time so the report went unpublished 7 The government s position was that drug abusers were victims of their own choices rather than their socio economic circumstances 8 The Misuse of Drugs Act 1984 was enacted to provide for tougher punishments than the 1977 Act The 1980s also saw the rise of community groups which organised themselves to rid their local areas of drugs Priests politicians and even Provisional IRA members took part in residents associations in areas of Dublin such as Fatima Mansions the Hardwicke Street flats St Teresa s Gardens and Dolphin House Groups met to name and shame drug dealers giving them the choice either to stop dealing or leave the area Actions broadened to include patrols by residents checkpoints to search vehicles for drugs forced evictions and other vigilante actions These local groups got together and adopted a constitution in February 1984 naming themselves Concerned Parents Against Drugs 7 The Drug Treatment Centre Board moved to Trinity Court in 1988 following the closure of Jervis Street hospital The most significant event of the decade was the arrival of the HIV AIDS epidemic to Ireland The first diagnosed case of AIDS was in 1982 Early cases before 1987 were found in homosexual men this soon spread to intravenous drug users overtaking cases amongst homosexual men 9 A survey by the Department of Health in 1986 found that 30 of intravenous drug users were HIV positive 8 1990s edit Ireland has a drugs problem But beyond this simple statement we must also recognise that Ireland s drugs problem is primarily an opiates problem mainly heroin And beyond this we must recognise that Ireland s heroin problem is principally a Dublin phenomenon Pat Rabbitte 1996 1 There were an estimated 13 460 opiate users in Ireland in 1996 10 The HIV AIDS epidemic in Ireland was most active among intravenous drug users Treatment in centres such as Trinity Court required a commitment from the patient to achieve abstinence from drugs In light of the HIV epidemic this policy was revised in 1992 to one of harm reduction 11 This different approach recognised that the harms of drug use such as the spread of HIV were of a greater danger to society than drug use itself 12 Harm reduction was implemented in the form of methadone maintenance and needle exchange programmes The first needle exchange opened in 1989 13 and there were about eleven others by the end of the 1990s 14 There are now plans to offer needle exchange services at pharmacies 15 In the very late 1980s amp the early 1990s the Irish Republican amp Revolutionary socialist paramilitary group the Irish People s Liberation Organisation or just IPLO for short brought in thousands amp thousands of Ecstasy pills also known as E amp E pills chemically known as 3 4 Methylenedioxymethamphetamine MDMA into Ireland According to authors Henry McDonald amp Jack Holland the IPLO became involved in drug dealing in early 1989 and at 25 per pill the IPLO made massive profits from the drug trade 16 The pills were bought in Amsterdam amp then the IPLO smuggled their pills out from Holland then to France along old Irish National Liberation Army INLA the group the IPLO split from arm routes amp to Rosslare Europort County Wexford Republic of Ireland they were then hidden amp stored in a safe house in Swords Dublin and some of the pills were sold around Dublin city but the vast bulk of the E Pills were sold in Belfast City where the IPLO was at its strongest militarily According to Holland amp McDonald the drugs were hidden amp packed under the floorboards of camper vans and driven across Europe towards western French ports Once in Ireland the pills were placed inside Paracetamol bottles amp delivered to Belfast 17 In October 1992 the Provisional IRA Belfast Brigade wiped out the IPLO in Belfast 18 Head shops editHead shops Irish siopai siabhrain siopai cloigne siopai cnaibe derangement head hemp shops 19 20 did exist legally in Ireland and were reported by authorities to be opening at a rate of one per week in January 2010 Some of the shops were open 24 hours a day serving through a hatch at night 21 The legality of the shops was discussed in Seanad Eireann that month with an all party motion being passed requesting the Government to introduce legislation to regulate the sale of products 21 One head shop in Roscommon received objections from residents two weeks after opening for business that month Head shops received a lot of media attention in 2010 with one doctor describing on the television programme Prime Time patients of his who suffered hallucinations anxiety and psychosis after experiencing legal highs party powders from head shop substances 22 Politicians weighed in with Chris Andrews in favour of outlawing head shops while Jim McDaid said this would be a huge mistake which would allow illegal street dealers to thrive 22 There was controversy and irony when a judge renowned for his strict anti drug sentencing discovered that a premises he had rented to a business in Naas contained a head shop and evicted the operator 23 24 25 26 Attacks on head shops edit A Dublin head shop exploded and caught fire on 12 February 2010 engulfing a neighbouring building in fire and the surrounding streets and quays in smoke causing Capel Street to be closed for the day 27 The blaze levelled two other businesses including a sex shop as one of Dublin s busiest streets was evacuated 28 29 A second head shop burned down on 16 February 2010 in Dublin 30 On 10 March 2010 two pipe bombs were found outside two separate head shops in Athlone and Garda bomb disposal experts closed two main streets in the town The attacks were later traced to disgruntled drug dealers 31 32 Another burned down on 11 March 2010 in Sligo and an adult shop also caught fire 33 On 16 April 2010 in Dundalk County Louth a head shop was set alight in a petrol bomb attack The county is home to then Minister for Justice Dermot Ahern and hours later plans for legislation for regulation of head shops got underway 34 On 28 March 2010 vigilante group Republican Action Against Drugs RAAD claimed responsibility for planting an explosive device outside a head shop in Letterkenny County Donegal It was made safe by the security forces RAAD issued a statement that it was the first and only warning the shop would receive the head shop closed shortly afterwards 35 36 2010 legislation edit Many head shop products became illegal in Ireland on 23 August 2010 37 when the new Criminal Justice Psychoactive Substances Act 2010 became law 38 The Act empowered Gardai to seek court orders to close head shops suspected of selling drug like products with the onus on the owners to prove they are not doing so Following this legislation the number of head shops declined dramatically from 112 to just 12 39 2015 legislation edit Before a Government order took effect in 2011 head shops had been legally selling methylethcathinone a recreational drug Earlier Government orders also pursuant to the Misuse of Drugs Act outlawed the possession of other head shop drugs like ecstasy and magic mushrooms Stanislav Bederev charged with methylethcathinone possession in 2012 challenged the constitutionality of such Government orders On 10 March 2015 the Court of Appeal ruled in Bederev s favour on the basis that the orders amounted to law making a power reserved for the Oireachtas Emergency legislation to reinstate the ban on drugs previously banned by Government orders which also include amphetamine khat and ketamine took effect on 12 March 2015 40 41 42 The Court of Appeal ruling implicated pending cases involving possession of those drugs and may potentially have led to appeals from those previously convicted of possession of those drugs 43 44 However in June 2016 the Supreme Court overturned the Court of Appeal s ruling finding the original Government orders constitutional on the basis that the Government was bound to outlaw only drugs of the same nature as those already listed in the Misuse of Drugs Act and that the Oireachtas was given the right to annul the Government s orders if the Oireachtas so chose 45 Advocacy for law reform editThe political party People Before Profit PBP supports Ireland moving towards the Portuguese Model to undermine criminal gangs It also supports the immediate decriminalisation of the possession of drugs for personal use and low level distribution 46 The Social Democrats also support the decriminalisation of drugs for personal use 47 Since 30 June 2023 Ireland s Labour Party has called for the decriminalisation of users in regards to drugs and supports the legalisation of cannabis for recreational and medicinal use in Ireland 48 In 2020 as part of the government formation negotiations with Fianna Fail and Fine Gael the Green Party have called for sweeping reforms of Ireland s drug laws The Green Party stated that the criminalisation of drug consumption is a counter productive policy that perpetuates business models of organised crime and fails to address the public health impact of drugs They believe there is a more compassionate policy based on international best practice that could be introduced within existing constraints under international law The Green Party stated that if they got into government which they did they would shift drugs policy from a criminal justice approach to a public health approach 49 In 2023 after ongoing lobbying by the Green Party and many others the government officially announced that it would convene at Citizen s Assembly on Drug Use 50 51 52 53 In 2021 over 100 youth workers and former youth workers in the Republic of Ireland formed the Youth Workers Against Prohibition Ireland organisation and called for the legal regulation of all drugs in Ireland The organisation is part of those who have signed an open letter criticising drug prohibition which has also been signed by Irish Senators Eileen Flynn and Lynn Ruane Signatories to the letter said that if drugs were legal and regulated the criminal market would be cut out and youth services social services and medical services could treat the matter of drug addiction as a social medical and health issue 54 See also editCannabis in Ireland Direct Action Against Drugs Luke Ming Flanagan Head shops in Ireland Misuse of Drugs Act Ireland Republican Action Against DrugsReferences edit a b First report of the ministerial task force on measures to reduce the demand for drugs Irish Government Stationery Office 1996 Report of working party on drug abuse Irish Government Stationery Office 1971 Dail debates 1975 Volume 278 20 February Column 938 Coolmine TC Coolmine TC Retrieved 29 March 2023 Dean G O Hare A O Connor A Kelly M Kelly G 1985 The opiate epidemic in Dublin 1979 1983 Irish Medical Journal 78 4 107 110 PMID 3997451 Bradshaw J Dean G Drug misuse in Ireland 1982 1983 investigation in a north central Dublin area and in Galway Sligo and Cork The Medico Social Research Board 1983 a b Lyder Andre 2005 Pushers Out The Inside Story of Dublin s Anti Drugs Movement Trafford Publishing ISBN 978 1 4120 5099 9 a b Butler S Drug problems and drug policies in Ireland a quarter of a century reviewed Administration 1991 39 3 210 235 O Kelly FD The natural history of injecting drug use in a Dublin community 1985 1995 MD thesis 2000 Department of Community Health and General Practice Trinity College University of Dublin Comiskey C Barry J 2001 A capture recapture study of the prevalence and implications of opiate use in Dublin European Journal of Public Health 11 2 198 200 doi 10 1093 eurpub 11 2 198 hdl 2262 91866 PMID 11420811 Barry J 2002 Policy response to opioid misuse in Dublin Journal of Epidemiology amp Community Health 56 1 6 7 doi 10 1136 jech 56 1 6 PMC 1731997 PMID 11801613 National Advisory Committee on Drugs the National Drugs Strategy Team Needle exchange provision in Ireland 2008 Butler S Mayock P 2005 An Irish solution to an Irish problem Harm reduction and ambiguity in the drug policy of the Republic of Ireland International Journal of Drug Policy 16 6 415 422 doi 10 1016 j drugpo 2005 07 002 Dillon L O Brien M Drug related infectious diseases In Moran R editor A collection of papers on drugs issues in Ireland Dublin Health Research Board 2001 pp 50 82 O Driscoll D Keane R Pharmacy Needle Exchange Programme Archived 28 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Conference presentation 2009 Needle Exchange Conference Killarney Higgins Kathryn McElrath Karen The Trouble with Peace The Cease Fires and their Impact on Drug Use among Youth in Northern Ireland Sage Journals SAGE Publishing doi 10 1177 0044118X00032001003 S2CID 144709116 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Holland Jack McDonald Henry 1994 INLA Deadly Divisions 1994 Paperback ed Torc pp 311 313 ISBN 978 1898142058 Haverty Dan 8 November 2019 IRA s Night of Long Knives part in Northern Ireland s peace process IrishCentral Irish Central Retrieved 26 December 2022 An tAire Gnothai Pobail Comhionannais agus Gaeltachta Pat Carey TD Beo Cinealacha Drugai Drugs ie Retrieved 29 March 2023 a b Dramatic increase in head shops RTE 26 January 2010 a b Head shops booming as row rages over legal highs Sunday Independent By Aislinn hughes Sunday 7 February 2010 Head shop asked to quit judge s outlet The Irish Times Thursday 4 February 2010 Tough Irish judge unaware he was owner of legal high shop The Belfast Telegraph By Eimear Ni Bhraonain Thursday 4 February 2010 Judge owns premises rented by Naas head shop Leinster Leader Published Date 4 February 2010 By Paul O Meara Judge left red faced as he is forced to boot out his tenant who opened a head shop next to the courthouse permanent dead link Herald ie By Cormac Byrne Thursday 4 February 2010 Head shop fire in Dublin city centre RTE Friday 12 February 2010 12 37 Three shops destroyed in Capel St fire Archived 25 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine Herald ie By Conor Feehan and Alan O Keeffe Friday 12 February home moconnell06 Desktop clongowes net thumb png2010 450 000 cash found in Dublin head shop after fire The Irish Times Fire damages Dublin head shop Charlie Taylor The Irish Times 17 February 2010 Head shops target of pipe bomb attack Irish Independent 11 March 2010 Garda superintendent slams reckless pipe bomb act Westmeath Independent 18 March 2010 Sligo head shop amp adult store damaged in fire RTE News 11 March 2010 Fire breaks out at head shop in Dundalk Irish Times 16 April 2010 Bomb threatened head shop closes Local Donegal Democrat www donegaldemocrat ie Archived from the original on 1 August 2012 Retrieved 22 May 2022 http www nwipp newspapers com dn free 320204301714770 php permanent dead link S I No 401 2010 Criminal Justice Psychoactive Substances Act 2010 Commencement Order 2010 Irish Statute Book 17 August 2010 Criminal Justice Psychoactive Substances Act 2010 Irish Statute Book Irish Times Minister seeks to ban more products sold in head shops 5 October 2011 The Irish Times Dail passes emergency legislation over drug ruling 10 March 2015 via www rte ie a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help O Loughlin Ann 11 March 2015 Drugs Ruling Law making powers are restricted to Oireachtas Irish Examiner Retrieved 19 April 2019 Connolly Johnny 1 October 2015 Misuse of Drugs Amendment Act 2015 Drugnet Ireland Issue 55 Autumn 2015 11 12 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a volume has extra text help Minihan Mary Hilliard Mark Gallagher Conor Drugs ruling will impact on pending cases says expert The Irish Times Retrieved 19 April 2019 Hurst Luke 11 March 2015 Class A Drugs Accidentally Legalised in Ireland Newsweek Retrieved 19 April 2019 Courts Service of Ireland 22 June 2016 Bederev v Ireland amp ors Judgments amp Determinations Courts Service of Ireland Retrieved 19 April 2019 Drugs Policy pbp ie 6 January 2022 Retrieved 9 February 2022 Drug Reform socialdemocrats ie Social Democrats Ireland Retrieved 1 February 2024 o Riordain Aodhan 30 June 2023 Fundamental reform of drug policy needed labour ie Labour Party Ireland Retrieved 1 February 2024 stuartclark The Green Party calls for drug decriminalisation in Ireland Hotpress Retrieved 27 February 2023 Barry Aoife 12 November 2022 Bill to be introduced that would legalise personal use of cannabis TheJournal ie Retrieved 27 February 2023 Labour Party calls for decriminalisation of drugs for personal use The Irish Times Retrieved 27 February 2023 We need an evidence based drug policy that comes from a position of harm reduction Neasa Hourigan TD launches Citizens Assembly framework proposal Green Party www greenparty ie Retrieved 27 February 2023 Cunningham Paul 14 February 2023 Cabinet approves new Citizens Assembly on drug use a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Freyne Patrick 3 July 2021 Legalising drugs Drug use should be treated as normal adult behaviour The Irish Times Retrieved 27 August 2022 External links editIreland Drug Report 2017 Prohibition has never worked anywhere and it never will TheJournal ie Published 22 January 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Illicit drug use in Ireland amp oldid 1217058917, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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