UK city changed into ‘Zombieland’ as super-strength potent drug floods streets
A British town has been turned into a ‘Zombieland’ as street drugs laced with lethal, super-strength synthetic opioids trigger a deadly wave of overdoses
The grim reality of Britain’s drug crisis has turned a seaside town into a real-life “Zombieland,” as a wave of super-strength synthetic opioids leaves users incapacitated in broad daylight. Grimsby is currently on the frontline of a terrifying epidemic.
The air in the port town is thick with the smell of cannabis, while addicts wander the streets in a daze. Public health chiefs have issued urgent warnings that Class A substances like heroin and cocaine are being bulked out with lethal chemicals, sparking “very sudden overdoses.”
Police have recently intercepted supplies laced with nitazenes – synthetic opioids that can be a staggering 500 times more potent than heroin.
The horrific substance slows a user’s breathing to a near-fatal pace, leaving them zombified, unresponsive and at immediate risk of respiratory failure.
For locals, the human cost is impossible to ignore. The town has suffered a major spike in overdoses over the last six months, with at least 14 linked to contaminated batches.
Peter Nigel Loche, 56, who uses heroin and crack cocaine while undergoing methadone treatment, laid bare the terrifying reality of the current market.
He told the Sun: “My mate is in a coma after a bad batch of drugs. There is a problem with drugs in this town. Sometimes you are not getting what you pay for. I’ve had some of it. I am cutting down now. But there are always people looking for something stronger.”
The crisis is being fuelled by major county lines drug operations. Last month, dealers Owen Barker, 24, and Jack Baker, 20, were locked up for running Grimsby’s busiest drug ring, sending out 900 texts a day to 300 customers.
Some of their product was laced with etonitazene, a banned 1950s painkiller. Alarmingly, traces of fentanyl, the drug currently decimating communities across the United States, have also been detected locally.
Residents say the sheer volume of dealing is inescapable. Andrew Jackson, 43, said: “This town is full of drugs. You can just go around the corner and buy them. You get kids, aged 12 or 13, coming up to you on bicycles offering to sell to you. They have bags full of crack and spice in them.”
The explosion of synthetic opioids is tied to global shifts. After the Taliban banned opium production in Afghanistan, which previously supplied 80 to 90 percent of the world’s heroin, dealers turned to Chinese chemical labs for substitutes.
The substances are often smuggled into the UK hidden inside everyday items like dog food. The terrifying potency of nitazenes means standard overdose reversal treatments, like Naloxone, are frequently ineffective.
Tragically, the fallout is devastating local families. Local resident Trish Harrison, 76, shared her heartbreak after losing a close friend.
She said: “The drug problem is terrible. My [friend] died from a bad batch of drugs only last week. He was only in his 40s. There was a hell of a wake for him at the pub. He was such a nice bloke.”
Her neighbour, Steve Sanigar, 66, added: “We have had about five bad batches in the last month. You see them walking down the middle of the road zonked out of their brains.”
Experts warn this could just be the tip of the iceberg, with rehab specialists predicting the UK will inevitably follow the devastating trajectory of the US opioid crisis.
With 27 percent of Grimsby’s neighbourhoods ranked as highly deprived, the vulnerable community remains a prime target for drug dealers. Geoff Barnes, deputy director of Public Health for Northern Lincolnshire, urged extreme caution.
He said: “We know there’s some potentially dangerous drugs circulating in the Grimsby area. These drugs can cause a very sudden overdose which can be life threatening. It’s really important to follow the advice issued to protect both yourself and your friends.”
