A NORTH Wales policing tsar fears more people will die needlessly due to the UK Government ruling out introducing special facilities for drug addicts.

Police and Crime Commissioner Arfon Jones has slammed the Government for not agreeing to create facilities where addicts can inject themselves safely and hygienically.

He says the refusal to even contemplate setting up a pilot project for a Drug Consumption Room (DCR) flies in the face of all the evidence.

The ruling by Victoria Atkins, the Minister for Crime, Safeguarding and Vulnerability, left Mr Jones "bitterly disappointed but not surprised".

Mr Jones, a former police inspector, said: “The minister’s job title is a joke because people who are caught up in problematic drug taking are undoubtedly vulnerable and she is doing nothing to safeguard them. Quite the reverse in fact.

“There is no question in my mind that people will die unnecessarily as a result of this short-sighted decision that is based on dogma and not on common sense.”

In a letter to West Midlands PCC David Jamieson, Ms Atkins reiterated the Government had no intention of introducing DCRs “either on a pilot basis or otherwise”.

She wrote: “The Government is not prepared to sanction or condone activity that promotes the illicit drug trade and the harms that trade causes to individuals and communities.”

The North Wales PCC is a long-term supporter of establishing DCRs and has been on a fact-finding trip to Switzerland to see one in action.

As a result Mr Jones believes problematic drug use should be treated as a medical issue and not as a crime.

There are 2,500 drug-related death every year in the UK and the commissioner says that establishing DCRs would benefit the individual drug users and local communities.

Mr Jones said: “There is irrefutable evidence that drug consumption rooms can save lives because the number of deaths from overdoses has decreased dramatically in places like Switzerland where they have a more enlightened and effective approach.

“They reduce syringe sharing and litter which in turn reduces the risk of blood-borne virus infections.

“Importantly, they also reduce the pressure on all the emergency services.

"Everyone is a winner."

He added: “Rather than persisting with the failed war against drugs, we should give problematic users somewhere secure to go rather than having to inject in public areas and upsetting people, increasing fear of crime and anti-social behaviour due to their behaviour.”