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Significant efforts are being made to combat the threat of devastating synthetic drugs, which the UK government warns is increasing.
Measures are being stepped up across government to better equip policing, healthcare and Border Force to deal with this growing issue, as well as contributing to international efforts to better protect communities.
Latest figures show since June 2023, there have been at least 400 drug-related deaths across the UK linked to nitazenes, a type of synthetic opioid, and this figure is expected to increase in the coming years.
As part of the effort to make our streets safer, legislation will come into force today (Wednesday 15 January) which bans xylazine, as well as several other synthetic drugs that can be hundreds of times more potent than heroin, meaning tougher sentences for drug dealers.
Xylazine, often known as tranq, is a high-strength veterinary sedative, which has increasingly been used in combination with opioids such as heroin.Its effects can leave users prone to non-healing skin lesions and more liable to overdose.
The UK is also training Border Force dogs to detect a range of nitazenes and fentanyl currently the only country in the world doing so to stop these substances entering the country in the first place.
As of December 2024, police officers in forces across the country are now trained to carry and administer naloxone a lifesaving medicine that reverses the effects of opioid overdose. The government is working closely with the National Police Chiefs Council to see the provision rolled out across most forces.
The National Crime Agency is also working in partnership with policing and Border Force to ensure that all lines of enquiry are prioritised and vigorously pursued to stem any supply of nitazenes and fentanyl to and within the UK.
Policing Minister Dame Diana Johnson said:
Synthetic drugs cause devastation wherever they are found to individuals, to families, to our town centres and our communities.
I have been concerned about the growing presence of these drugs on UK streets and I dont think enough has been done in recent years to get a grip on it.Stepping up efforts to tackle this threat will form a key part of this governments approach to drugs, which we hope to set out later this year.
As part of our Plan for Change and mission to make our streets safer, we are dedicated to driving down drug misuse and harms through prevention and treatment while acting quickly to stop the criminals peddling these harmful substances.
As part of the international effort to combat these substances, the UK is spearheading a workstream under the US-led Global Coalition to Address Synthetic Drug Threats which will focus on how governments across the world can control the availability of these drugs through legislation and further strengthen efforts at the border by sharing intelligence.
This is a multi-nation effort run by core coalition countries, who are developing their own initiatives that aim to disrupt supply chains and enhance public health interventions.
The government also has an enhanced early warning system, which is designed to improve our ability to respond to emerging drug threats with several new data streams, such as hospital admissions and lab-tested police seizures, which are monitored and fed into the decision-making processes.
Todays legislation will see 22 substances banned under the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971, 6 of which will be controlled as Class A.
This means that anyone caught producing or supplying these could now face up to life in prison, an unlimited fine, or both. Anyone caught possessing a Class A drug can also face up to 7 years in prison, a fine or both.
Xylazine will be controlled as a Class C substance, meaning its unlawful supply carries a maximum sentence of up to 14 years in prison, a fine or both and unlawful possession up to 2 years, a fine or both.
A generic definition of nitazenes, a type of synthetic opioid, has also been introduced into law today, which will prevent drug gangs from trying to make adjustments to drug recipes to atte