
Laughing gas ‘epidemic' sweeping party island with tourists left foaming at mouth, having seizures & permanently scarred
Armed with industrial-sized canisters of nitrous oxide, determined dealers roam the infamous San Antonio party strip - targeting Brits as "easy prey".
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But the Class C drug can cause a range of health issues - and in some cases can even be fatal.
In the UK, the gas is most commonly sold in small canisters which deliver a single dose - enough to fill one balloon.
But dealers in San Antonio are armed with huge canisters that pump out up to 80 hits - and come in boxes of six.
At the going rate of five euros a balloon, the street value of a six-pack of canisters is around £2,000 - and they're strewn across the town.
When The Sun visited the notorious strip, our reporter was hounded and followed down the street by dealers.
Katie Mae, a bartender at Irish pub Shenanigans on the town's main strip, said laughing gas is 'the worst of them all'.
The 21-year-old told The Sun: "I'll lecture anyone I see taking it - I've seen the worst things from laughing gas.
'I've seen young lads having seizures on the street and foaming at the mouths, but their friends are high so do nothing to help.
'One girl I saw inhaled gas straight from the canister, and it froze one side of her face.
"It was all cut up and she would have been scarred for life."
After working on the strip for three seasons, Katie said: 'The consequences aren't talked about anywhere near enough.
"People don't take it seriously as a drug - but it's one of the worst."
One British bar worker living in San Antonio told us she used to sell laughing gas here, but stopped after one of her customers 'nearly died'.
The Brit said she got 'freaked out' when a young lad fell backwards and smashed his head on the road in the midst of a balloon high.
She told us: 'I used to sell laughing gas for about a year-and-a-half because it was easy money.
'You'd sell each balloon for five euros and buy the canisters for cheap. There's loads of shops around here that sell them.
'But as soon as that happened I stopped. It really freaked me out.
'And the gas is not good stuff - it freezes your insides.'
Nitrous oxide - the facts
NITROUS oxide - also known as laughing gas or hippy crack - was recently made a Class C due to the dangers associated with the drug.
It can cause a range of health issues and in some cases can even be fatal.
Some common side effects from inhaling the gas are dizziness, nausea, disorientation, loss of balance and weakness in legs, according to a study on its risks published to the National Library of Medicine.
Nitrous oxide can impair memory and thinking, the research mentioned. Some users might also feel anxious or paranoid.
According to the Alcohol and Drug Foundation (ADF), the gas from nitrous oxide bulbs is intensely cold, sometimes as low as minus 40 degrees Celsius.
Inhaling directly from the canister or crackers - handheld devices used to 'crack' open canister - can cause frostbite on the nose, lips and throat, even the vocal cords.
The icy chill of the gas canisters can also cause cold burns to the hands.
Long term, heavy use of laughing gas can cause a lack of vitamin B12. Severe deficiency can lead to serious nerve damage, causing tingling and numbness in the fingers and toes.
Lack of B12 can also cause damage to the spinal cord.
In some cases, frequent and prolonged use of nitrous oxide has been linked to thromboembolic events - this means a blood clot has gotten stuck and caused an obstruction.
The so-called laughing gas has also resulted in deaths.
Another Brit staff member at the bar described the situation as an "epidemic".
The streets around San Antonio's so-called West End, which includes the main strip and most of the bars, are littered with brightly-coloured rubber confetti.
Angelica Giraldo, a shopworker at Xanadu Supermarket near the strip, said the mess left behind by party-goers has ruined certain areas.
She said: 'Lots of the tourists who come to San Antonio seem just to want to take drugs and to party rather than enjoy the island.
'I don't really see the other stuff - but the rubbish from the balloons is very clear. You see them all over the road, it's very ugly.'
Angelica, 40, has lived in Ibiza all her life and noticed a sharp rise in laughing gas in recent years.
She said: 'It is everywhere now. And it causes lots of accidents.
'People take it while driving, but it makes them go crazy and they crash. This happens a lot.'
Selling the gas for recreational use is illegal in Spain - but that doesn't stop a crew of drug dealers openly pushing it every night.
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Walking around the West End, tourists are hounded constantly by - and see youngsters as an easy sell.
The dealers loiter amongst the outdoor bar seating and persistently hassle drinkers to encourage them to buy balloons - and many do.
Bartender Katie claimed the dealers have an app to alert each other if police are patrolling a certain area.
On one occasion, The Sun saw Civil Guards officers walking down the strip with a confiscated canister, and another cop was seen searching a young man for drugs.
The Sun approached cops on the street - but they all refused to talk about the issue.
While laughing gas is the most obvious drug in San Antonio due to the brightly-coloured balloons, almost any party drug you can think of is readily available.
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Walking along the sea-front, dealers call out "hey, dude, yo, what do you need?' to almost every passerby.
Anything other than a stern refusal sees them opening up a pouch stuffed full of drugs, and flashing you bags of coloured powders or pills.
Ricardo, who runs Jungle Bistró Ibiza in the old town district with his wife, said he is glad that most of the anti-social behaviour is limited to San Antonio's West End.
And he said it is 'easy' for the dealers to sell to young Brits.
The restaurant manager said: 'A lot of them are British, they come to San Antonio just for the parties.
'It is easy to sell to them. I don't want any of that over in this part of town. We mainly have families around here'
San Antonio Town Council said: "The process is also underway to incorporate ten new officers into the Local Police force, increasing its staff from 59 to 69.
"This will ensure a more effective service tailored to the municipality's current needs.
"A new position of intrusion and community coexistence officer has also been created, and a private security service will be put out to tender with the aim of reducing vandalism and uncivil behaviour in selected areas.
"The City Council is fully aware that these are only the first steps in a broader transformation process and that there is still a long way to go.
"Therefore, it remains steadfast in its commitment to continue working to build a better Sant Antoni for everyone, supporting a tourism model that prioritizes quality, sustainability, and coexistence."

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BBC News
8 minutes ago
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Paul Burnell BBC News Liverpool Merseyside Police Shaw told police she did not want her partner to die A woman tried to gouge her terminally ill partner's eyes as she beat him and dragged him from his sick bed, a court has heard. Steven Cox, 64, of Rothwell Street, Liverpool, died in hospital on New Year's Day, Merseyside Police said. His partner, Gillian Shaw, 62, who cared for him at their home, admitted manslaughter at Liverpool Crown Court. She was jailed earlier for five years. Police said Shaw, who was originally charged with murder, suffered from several mental health conditions. Senior crown prosecutor Edward Cain, of CPS Mersey-Cheshire, said: "Mr Cox said they had a good relationship, and that Shaw suffered from poor mental health. "Establishing the correct level of charge was complicated. "Only when expert reports were received could the CPS assess all the evidence and determine the correct level of charge. "This is an incredibly sad case and the Crown Prosecution Service offers its condolences to the all the family members and friends of Steven Cox." Merseyside Police Steven Cox was terminally ill when Gillian Shaw attacked him 'Loved him' Police said they were called by Shaw on New Year's Eve , saying she had hit her partner and tried to poke his eyes. Mr Cox was on the floor, and Shaw, who was "clearly upset", admitted to officers that she had assaulted him. Shaw had attacked her partner before, but he had been unwilling to support a prosecution, indicating that she needed help for mental health rather than being prosecuted. Mr Cox described their relationship as good but said it had deteriorated because of Shaw's mental health issues. When she was interviewed by police, Shaw said she had called them because she thought Mr Cox might die because of what she had done to him. She said she did not want him to die and she loved him. Police said Mr Cox had "significant medical conditions, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and emphysema, giving him a life expectancy of 12 months". Related internet links


Telegraph
8 minutes ago
- Telegraph
One year on, this is how the Southport attack has changed Britain
A year ago today, 17-year-old Axel Rudakubana walked into the Hart Space dance studio in Meols Cop, Southport, where 26 children were midway through a Taylor Swift-themed dance class. In a 12-minute knife rampage, Rudakubana murdered three girls, Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, Bebe King, six, and Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and attempted to murder many others. In January, Rudakubana was sentenced to life in prison, with a minimum term of 52 years. While the survivors and the families of the victims try to rebuild their lives, 12 months on from Rudakubana's attack, its effects continue to reverberate around Britain. The days after the attack provided a second tragedy. Initially, police stated only that a man 'born in Cardiff' had been arrested. As false rumours that the killer was in fact a Muslim asylum seeker spread quickly online, a wave of public disorder was unleashed in Southport and beyond. Emotions stirred up by the nature of the killings combined with online misinformation and a lack of clarity from authorities to provoke widespread rioting. This was not just in Southport, where 50 police officers were injured, but all over the country: London, Belfast, Burnley. A judge eventually named Rudakubana, the Cardiff-born son of Rwandan immigrants, who had moved to the UK in 2002, but the fuse had been lit. In Tamworth, rioters attacked police and attempted to set fire to a hotel housing asylum seekers. Filipino nurses were attacked in Sunderland. In Stoke-on-Trent, 94 people were arrested. In total, more than 1,800 were arrested, many sentenced summarily as Keir Starmer sought to restore the impression of order. In January, Andrew McIntyre was jailed for seven and a half years for using an account called 'Southport Wake Up' to encourage disorder around July 30. The Southport attack was a crime of such enormity, and the scale of fallout so large, that it has had ramifications far beyond the immediate victims and surrounding area. Policing, sentencing guidelines, immigration, knife laws, free speech, the right to protest: all have been in the spotlight since last July. Ministers promised that things would change. In January, when the Home Office announced a public inquiry into the killings, the prime minister said that Southport must be a 'line in the sand'. Six months on from that statement, it has not proved so. Fractures exposed by Southport and its aftermath are far from healed. Recent protests outside an asylum hotel in Epping Forest and a supposed asylum hotel in Canary Wharf are obvious examples of stories that can be traced directly back to Southport. But the attack's macabre echoes can be heard whenever an online rumour spreads before authorities can react, or someone is arrested for a social media post, or a peaceful protest threatens to spill over into something more sinister. A town changed for ever In Southport, reaction to the attack was grief and fury. Thousands of locals held a vigil, laying flowers and clutching pink ribbons. As the outpouring gave way to rage, the recently elected Labour MP for Southport, Patrick Hurley, told journalists the town was 'united to say the atrocity on Monday, which is the worst in living memory in the town, and also the riots on Tuesday night, are not the Southport we know and love'. The mosque still has shutters over its windows. Child-focused businesses report lower levels of trade. In the aftermath of the attacks, many other youth clubs and classes reviewed their safety procedures, some cancelling them altogether. But in other ways the town is slowly putting itself back together. In an interview earlier this year, Marion Atkinson, the Sefton council leader, said Southport would 'not let one person's actions break us apart'. A new £10m garden is being built in the centre of town, a 'legacy' rather than a memorial. 'I don't think we can move on from what happens,' she tells The Telegraph. 'Moving forward, is how I would say things are going. Our community's response was bravery, compassion, solidarity, and we keep that in our hearts as we go forward. People are still grieving; the most important thing is to remain as supportive as we can.' The victims' families, supported by Sefton council, asked that there be no large-scale vigils or flower-laying to mark the anniversary. 'This period is incredibly hard for the families of Alice, Bebe and Elsie and all of those children and adults injured or who suffered lifelong psychological impact of witnessing the attack, and we acknowledge the huge impact on their lives too,' it said in an open letter. Instead it urged people to donate to local causes. 'While it showed the worst, it also showed the best of us, and it definitely grew our community together,' says Atkinson. 'We have to keep on looking after each other.' More calls for knife control Rudakubana used a knife he had bought on Amazon when he was 17, despite it being illegal to sell knives to under-18s. In September 2024, six weeks after the killings, Starmer and Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, launched the Coalition to Tackle Knife Crime, with the actor Idris Elba as its figurehead. So-called zombie knives, which are serrated to make wounds more difficult to treat, were banned on September 24. Ninja swords will be banned this Friday, August 1. Announcing a new Crime and Policing Bill earlier this year, Starmer said that it 'remains shockingly easy for our children to get their hands on deadly knives', adding that 'the lessons of [the Southport] case could not be clearer'. Patrick Green, the chief executive of the Ben Kinsella Trust, a knife crime charity, says: 'One of the issues Southport raises is how easy it was for the perpetrator to get hold of knives. It's deeply concerning because we know it's not an isolated incident. Recent legislation is a step in the right direction but much more needs to be done. It has never been easier for an under-18 to buy a knife than it is at the moment.' The legislation includes measures to raise the maximum sentence for selling knives to children from six months to two years, and make tech executives personally liable if illegal weapons were listed on their site. Those trying to buy knives online would be required to submit two types of identification. While the law restricts ninja swords and zombie knives, however, would-be attackers can still easily get hold of kitchen knives. In May, Leanne Lucas, a dance teacher who survived the attack, launched Let's Be Blunt, a campaign to have pointed tips on kitchen knives replaced by blunt ones. 'As a consumer you have a choice,' Green says. 'You don't have to buy a pointed knife. Our kitchens are an armoury. Rounded knives perform the kitchen function as well if not better than a pointed knife. As consumers we all have a part to play.' The implications for free speech In the months after the attacks, police forces around the country clamped down on online speech. Southport did not begin the trend for policing social media, but it accelerated it. The most famous case was that of Lucy Connolly. In July 2024, during the frenzy of online speculation about the identity of the attacker, in which it was thought it might be an illegal immigrant, Connolly, then a 41-year-old childminder from Northampton, wrote a 51-word post on X: 'Mass deportation now. Set fire to all the f---ing hotels full of the bastards for all I care. While you're at it, take the treacherous government and politicians with them. I feel physically sick knowing what these families will now have to endure. If that makes me racist, so be it.' She deleted the post less than four hours later, but by then, it had been seen more than 310,000 times. In October, Connolly was given a 31-month jail sentence after admitting inciting racial hatred. Her case has become a flashpoint for conversations about free speech in the UK. Stephen O'Grady, an officer with the Free Speech Union, said the case was 'emblematic of wider concerns' with regard to police interest in online activity. Police make an average of around 30 arrests per day for online posts. In November 2024, Essex Police visited Telegraph columnist Allison Pearson's home over a post on X about the Israel-Hamas war which incited racial hatred. Coming in and around a United States presidential election in which freedom of speech was a contested topic, particularly by Elon Musk, such cases were used as evidence that the UK – and Europe – was far behind the US on free speech. JD Vance, Donald Trump's vice-president, has repeatedly attacked Europe for its limitations on freedom of speech. In a scathing speech to the Munich Security Conference in February, Vance made reference to the case of Adam Smith-Connor, who was jailed for praying outside an abortion clinic, and argued that 'the basic liberties of religious Britons, in particular' were under threat. In May, Trump said he was 'monitoring' the Connolly case. As high-profile police investigations into the music acts Kneecap and Bob Vylan have shown, it is not only during riots that police are using their new powers, but day-to-day. This week, it was reported that the police are planning to set up a new elite unit, the National Internet Intelligence Investigations team, to help police online posts. The unit, proposed in a letter to MPs by the policing minister, Diana Johnson, as part of the response to Southport, would offer 'enhanced capacity to monitor and respond to social media at the national level'. Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, said the proposal was 'sinister, dangerous and must be fought', and that it was 'the beginning of the state controlling free speech'. Public protests tipping into riots The eruption of public violence in late July and early August last year saw the most damaging public protests since the riots of 2011. They showed how difficult it can be for the authorities, bound by restrictions on what can and can't be said, to keep pace in the internet era, when a lie can travel the world in seconds. The police were not legally allowed to name Rudakubana, as he was under 18. A local parent, Eddie Murray, posted on LinkedIn claiming a 'migrant' was responsible for the attack, which was quickly reshared by prominent Right-wing accounts. To try to quell the violence, by August 1, a judge had removed the reporting restrictions, arguing that the 'idiotic rioting' made it in the public interest for the killer to be named. Dame Melanie Dawes, the Ofcom chief executive, wrote: 'Posts about the Southport incident and subsequent events from high-profile accounts reached millions of users, demonstrating the role that virality and algorithmic recommendations can play in driving divisive narratives in a crisis period.' Unlike other comparable protests, the riots after Southport were not organised by one group but rather by the coming together of many different groups, fuelled by misinformation. They led to counterprotests, too, by anti-racist groups. In a recent paper, John Drury, a professor of social psychology at the University of Sussex, argued that the Southport protests had more in common with the 'race' riots in Notting Hill and Nottingham in 1958 than with the riots of 2011. Rather than protests by minorities against authority, the protests in response to Southport were more like 'some kind of direct action' and were more attacks than traditional protests. The recent charged protests in Epping Forest and Canary Wharf follow the example of Southport: information spreads online, harnessed by disparate Right-wing groups, who descend on the target location. There, they are often met by counterprotesters. Georgina Laming, the campaigns and communications director of Hope not Hate, believes the far Right has been emboldened by the killings and their violent aftermath. 'Those more extreme protests have emboldened people to share more racist views than they would have before,' she says. 'It has had a knock-on effect of more persistent everyday racism. I don't think we are prepared for another set of riots. It's essential the police and Government learn the lessons.' Policing under renewed scrutiny One of the most shocking revelations in the case was that Rudakubana's teachers had warned the Prevent counterterrorism scheme three times that he was obsessed with violence. On each occasion, his case was closed because he did not have a terrorist motive. In a major review of Prevent released earlier this month, Lord David Anderson KC argued that it could have intervened and possibly stopped Rudakubana before he had become violent. 'It's a failure of the system,' Lord Anderson said, adding that 'it has to be made clear that these so-called violence-fascinated individuals do fall within its scope'. In January, Yvette Cooper argued that Southport had been failed by the police, the courts and Prevent. Widespread changes to Prevent have been announced, including new referral thresholds, improved training and an independent commissioner to act better on warning signs. The Government has also re-prioritised community-based policing and services as a counterbalance to online misinformation. In January, the Government announced another £200m for local policing. A report about the attacks by Cetas, the Centre for Emerging Technology and Security, said that because trust in official sources was so low, unofficial sources could help dispel false narratives. 'There are quite low levels of trust and confidence in government and law enforcement,' said Sam Stockwell, a co-author of the study. 'So if you can get non-government-affiliated sources sharing the same kind of information and facts, you are more likely to be able to resonate and engage with wider audiences.' Concerns about knife crime, free speech, immigration, protest and children's safety did not begin with Southport. The attack was so terrible that it exposed cracks that were already growing. Arguably no other single crime in recent memory has had such a disastrous effect on public order. The chaos after the attack gave politicians, such as Nigel Farage, space to make political hay with Southport. Ultimately, Southport undermined faith in the authorities and became a rallying cry for the far Right. For them, Southport was evidence of the need for tougher policing and sentencing. Despite Rudakubana being born in the UK, it also became a flashpoint for concerns about migration. For those on the Left, the response to Southport was evidence of far-Right opportunism in using a tragedy to advance its arguments, on immigration, for example, regardless of the truth of the events. The murders may have united Southport in grief and solidarity, but it is far from clear that it has had such a potent effect on the country at large. A year on, the long-term effects of Southport are only just becoming clear.


BBC News
8 minutes ago
- BBC News
Stoke-on-Trent: Some children too scared to leave cells
Some children at a young offenders institute in Staffordshire say they are too scared to leave their cells, according to an inspectors' Werrington was also criticised for, on occasions, not unlocking the children's cells for several days in a row and for not giving them enough access to Inspectorate of Prisons made unannounced visits to the site near Stoke-on-Trent from 15 April to 2 May.A spokesperson for the Ministry of Justice, which runs the site, said they were committed to tackling the issues outlined in the report. "Education is fundamental to reducing reoffending," they said."We have already taken action to embed daily welfare checks and ensure there is more time for youth justice workers to support young offenders with meaningful activities." Inspectors reported offenders spending too long locked up and said staff failed to manage behaviour well enough. HMYOI Werrington houses 81 boys aged between 15 and 18, their report to inspectors, a survey of the children revealed that only about a third of them felt cared for by said about a fifth of children reported feeling unsafe said the curriculum at HMYOI Werrington was not challenging enough and did not help children prepare for life they did report that the latest inspection had found a more stable leadership than in previous years, with the governor being in post since the previous visit, and improvements had been made to address previous staffing shortages. It was last inspected in 2023, when it was found to be "an unstable establishment in need of substantial support".It was also described in a 2022 report as having higher levels of violence than any other in England and Wales. 'Completely unacceptable' HM chief inspector of prisons Charlie Taylor said: "Despite clear improvement in safeguarding procedures and some concerted efforts to reduce conflict and violence, the key challenges of weak relationships between staff and children and ineffective behaviour management remained."He added there was a culture of control and separation and that the average time out of cell was just three and a half hours per day."This would be poor in any prison but is completely unacceptable in one holding children," Mr Taylor time was largely taken up with managing the separation of those who had to be kept apart for safety reasons, the report noted, however, that the governor and her team were aware of shortcomings and had enacted an improvement plan to address them the month before the inspection. Follow BBC Stoke & Staffordshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.