So far as I know, you can't do that. (National rules are subject to local amendments or not being used at all.)
And you wouldn't want to do that either!
This is a bit complex, but imagine a dog running along a fence and there are horses on the other side of the fence. The horses start running too!
This is the way electricity works when you run one wire next to another. The higher voltage wire gets electricity moving in the lower voltage wire.
And it is possible that the low voltage wire would have enough electricity in it from the other wire, that this would prevent the low voltage circuit from working properly.
Distance is a killer with this type of wiring! All sorts of weird things happen when you have long distances of low voltage wiring running next to higher voltage wires - like in a large warehouse which is several city blocks long.
This is called "inductance"...
(Following is a terribly complex explanation of this that only Einstein would understand!

)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inductance
Best to run the low voltage wire in a separate conduit and add a bit of air or dirt space between conduits.
Same with running wires inside a building. Best if there is maybe a foot of space between low voltage wires and higher voltage wires (as much as possible).
(And there is a
possibility of a short from the higher voltage wire to the low voltage wire - a potential safety problem.)
Back to the "inductance" thing, this is a bigger problem when you increase the voltage. Farmers working with metal pipes and fences under high voltage towers have all sorts of problems with this. They could be zapped by just picking up a length of metal irrigation pipe off the ground...
http://www.bpa.gov/corporate/pubs/Public_Service/LivingAndWorking.pdf