Mid and West Wales politician Joyce Watson MS has revealed how she had her drink spiked while at a friend's pub close to her home 39 years ago.

Mrs Watson shared her story during a Senedd debate, calling for urgent action about incidents of drink spiking.

The former pub licensee told the Senedd how she suddenly became ill while out with friends in 1982.

"Spiking of drinks is not new" said Ms Watson, who was then living on the border of Carmarthenshire and Ceredigion.

"I was living in a tiny village in Wales. I'd walked around 800 yards from my front door, and I wasn't in a nightclub.

"There was no taste to it, and I didn't know what had happened.

"But I was lucky because I had friends around me and they knew that something was wrong, and they made sure that I got home.

"I thought that I was ill, they thought that I was ill. My friend raised the alarm with my husband and I eventually woke up the next day."

The incident affected her eyesight, and she did not realise what had happened until one of her customers suggested she may have had her drink spiked.

"What I do know is there was a stranger in that particular pub on that particular night - a male stranger, and he never came back to the village."

"It is undoubtedly the case that he had spiked that drink."

She said it was important not to blame victims and called for all police forces in Wales to act on this crime, saying misogyny should be a hate crime.

"This is not about me and I ask all police forces across Wales to take this seriously," she added.

"I ask all men to join in the activities, particularly this month, November, when the international day to end violence against women is on 25 November and stand up and be counted."

Ms Watson and the Women’s Institute are asking men and boys to make a stand against male violence in their 2021 Not in my Name campaign.

It asks them to make the White Ribbon promise to ‘never commit, excuse or remain silent about male violence against women’.