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UK: MPs must consider debating cannabis legalisation after petition milestone: Over 100,000 sign appeal calling for total legalisation hosted on government’s official e-petitions website

Damien Gayle

The Guardian

Saturday 25 Jul 2015

More than 100,000 people have signed a petition in just four days calling for the total legalisation of cannabis.

The milestone, on an appeal hosted on the government’s official e-petitions website, means ministers must now consider debating the issue in parliament.

It comes after a persistent campaign on social media, with activist-linked Twitter accounts around the world calling on UK-resident dope smokers to sign up.

The drive comes in the same week that three police commissioners said that, in light of budget constraints, they would not expect their officers to prioritise the pursuit of people growing cannabis plants for personal use.
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The petition was posted to the parliament website on Tuesday. By 10am on Saturday morning, it had reached 100,000 signatures - the point at which the government says it would consider debating the issue in the Commons.

It calls for Parliament to “make the production, sale and use of cannabis legal”. According to its accompanying text: “Legalising cannabis could bring in £900m in taxes every year, save £400m on policing cannabis and create over 10,000 new jobs.

“A substance that is safer than alcohol, and has many uses. It is believed to have been used by humans for over 4000 years, being made illegal in the UK in 1925.”

Whether ministers will take heed of the petition is uncertain. The Conservative government has already set out a hardline position on drugs.

One of its first moves after taking office in May was to introduce a new bill that would automatically ban any new psychoactive substance not specifically exempted, regardless of any evidence of harm.

The most recent figures from the Crime Survey of England and Wales, published this week, showed the number of people using cannabis had risen to a five-year high. It also showed the number of young adults using the illicit herb soared past a million for the first time since 2010-11.

While the numbers reporting using cannabis remain well below levels in the 1990s and 2000s, the cannabis lobby has never been more organised. Groups such as Norml (National Organisation for the Reform of Marijuana Laws) UK and the UK Cannabis Social Clubs have sought to replicate the success of cannabis legalisation and decriminalisation campaigns in the US and elsewhere.

They have had qualified success. On Tuesday, Durham’s elected police and crime commissioner, Ron Hogg, indicated that officers from his force would not seek to prosecute people using cannabis or growing it for their own use.

Hogg, a longtime proponent of drug decriminalisation, said scarce police resources were better deployed tackling dealers and organised crime. Small-time growers and users would benefit more from treatment to help them live drug-free, he said.

A day later, Hogg’s counterpart in Derbyshire, Alan Charles, made a similar statement to the Guardian. He said the force would always target organised criminals producing large quantities of drugs.

Charles said: “If you are talking about people growing a couple of cannabis plants at home on the window sill, I would not expect Derbyshire police to prioritise that.”

Meanwhile, the Dorset commissioner, Martyn Underhill, who declined to comment on his force’s strategy on cannabis without first consulting his chief who was on holiday, sent a statement in support of Hogg.

“I really admire the work that Durham PCC Ron Hogg is doing in raising this debate about the decriminalisation of cannabis in various forms, such as personal or medicinal use,” the statement said. “I am discussing both issues currently with local MPs and Dorset police. It is for this reason that I am holding a drugs conference in January 2016.”

Then, on Friday, Kevin Hurley, Surrey commissioner, was asked on Twitter if enforcing the law against small-scale cannabis growers was a priority for his force. He said: “Against terrorism, child abuse, sexual assault, assaults, burglary, heroin trafficking, road deaths, fraud, domestic violence, cuts ... No.”

Steve Rolles, a senior analyst with Transform Drug Policy Foundation, told the Guardian this week that the statements from commissioners made explicit views that have been long held by some police.

“What’s different now with these guys is that they are speaking out,” he said. “They are making a public platform of views and policing practices that have been around for a long time.”

But it would be a mistake to think that all police share that view, said Rolles. Some still believe that, given enough resources, they can win the drug war. That split was also evident within the internal politics of the Conservative party, he said.

“There does seem to be a split between the more moral authoritarian figures, like Theresa May, and the small-state, freedom-of-the-individual Conservatives,” Rolles said.

“If you look at people like Boris Johnson, George Osborne and David Cameron, they are clearly more liberal in regards to the drug laws. But they are beholden to their little-England core voters and the whole Daily Mail agenda.”

http://www.theguardian.com/society/2015/jul/25/cannabis-legalisation-petition-government-website

 

 

 

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