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UK: Police Boost For Pro-Cannabis Lobby

Simon Macklin

South China Morning Post (Hong Kong)

Thursday 06 Apr 2000

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Local government election candidates standing on a "legalise cannabis"
platform are hoping for a boost from a police report which recommends
scrapping jail terms for possession of soft drugs. "It's not that we
expect to win any seats but whatever votes we get will make the other
parties realise they would not lose any support if they changed their
own policies," said Alun Buffry, a spokesman for the Legalise Cannabis
Alliance.

"We think the public is ready for a change on this issue.

"These days more people are beginning to realise the futility of a law
that punishes people for a crime that does not do anyone any harm and is
just a waste of police resources," Mr Buffry said. Recent elections
have seen a growing number of single-issue candidates standing on the
"legalise cannabis" ticket.

Although none has ever won more than seven per cent of the vote, the
group is hoping next month's local elections will see increased
support. "It may not be that it will happen at once but we are hoping
that within the next three years the Government will finally have
accepted the need to change the law," Mr Buffry said.

Britain currently has some of the stiffest penalties for the possession
of cannabis anywhere in Europe, yet studies show young people in Britain
are taking five times more illegal drugs than their counterparts on the
Continent.

Around 36 per cent of Britons admit to having used cannabis compared
with 25 per cent of the French, 21 per cent of Germans and 22 per cent
of Spanish people.

A report published by the Police Federation, the police officer's union,
last week said the current law was doing more harm than the drug itself
and called for a reclassification of drug offences. It suggested that
possession of small quantities of cannabis no longer be an arrestable
offence although police should retain the power to stop and search
people for drugs. The report has received wide public support with the
majority of newspapers, even those who traditionally take a conservative
stance, calling for the Government to change the law.

Although the Government has dismissed the report it is widely believed
its findings will prove influential. Britain is increasingly finding
itself out of step with the trend across Europe towards more liberal
drug laws.

The Netherlands, Germany and Italy do not prohibit the personal
consumption of cannabis, while Spain applies administrative sanctions
when its use is in a public place.

 

 

 

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