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UK: No retreat on cannabis

Leader

The Guardian

Tuesday 22 Mar 2005

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If ever a government had an early warning of one front it needs to defend
in this election campaign, it is Labour's downgrading of cannabis. On the
eve of ministers reclassifying cannabis from category B to the less harmful
category C about 14 months ago, the ever-opportunistic Michael Howard
declared a Conservative government would reverse it. He condemned the
government's drugs strategy as "absurd", which serious policy-makers
thought "shameless". Now, 14 months on, ministers are behaving "absurdly",
not by referring new evidence about the drug to the Advisory Council on the
Misuse of Drugs, but with their failure to set out the robust reasons
behind their decision last year.

Charles Clarke, the home secretary, asked the advisory council to say
whether it would change their mind as a result of "emerging evidence" of a
link between cannabis consumption and deteriorating mental health. It is
unlikely that they will. The advisory council - along with the Royal
College of Psychiatrists' working party and a Police Foundation's
independent committee of inquiry - were all aware of the risks that
cannabis posed to people vulnerable to mental illness when they made their
recommendations to reclassify.

But certainly the two studies specifically mentioned by Mr Clarke should be
referred to the council. The New Zealand study, according to Mr Clarke,
"considered how regular cannabis use increased the risk of developing
psychotic symptoms later in life". The conclusion of the Dutch study,
published in the British Medical Journal three months ago, repeats findings
of earlier research that "cannabis use moderately increases the risks of
psychotic symptoms in young people but has a much stronger effect in those
with evidence of predisposition for psychosis".

Much fuss has been aired in the red-top papers about these two studies, but
with few quotes from the researchers. Yet the professor who led the New
Zealand project told the New Zealand Herald: "These are not huge increases
in risk and nor should they be, because cannabis is by no means the only
thing that will determine if you suffer these symptoms." Professor Jim van
Os, one of the authors of the Dutch study, was even more robust. He told
the Guardian that the fact that cannabis could trigger psychosis in a small
minority of people was a good reason to legalise it, not ban it. This would
allow governments to promote advice and information and control more
dangerous forms like skunk. Packets could carry how much THC, the most
dangerous compound, the drug contained, along with how much CBD, the
compound believed to provide beneficial effects.

Dame Ruth Runciman, who chaired the influential Police Foundation study,
rightly reminded ministers that even with its downgrading, cannabis still
carried one of the the highest penalties compared with the rest of Europe:
up to two years in prison for possession and 14 years for trafficking. She
went on: "A law which is credible to young people is more valuable to
education than a law palpably at odds with their experience."

What was missing from the minister's response was a public reminder of why
the drug was reclassified. It followed expert advice from professionals -
medics, pharmacologists, police officers - not red-top papers. It freed a
wide swathe of police officers to pursue serious drug barons, rather than
trivial offenders. No wonder polls show 60% believe the drug should be
decriminalised. If ministers needed to add a political message, they could
have asked Mr Howard why he wanted to wage war on 50% of young people,
ensure tens of thousands of them be given criminal records and some prison
sentences, for an activity that more than 2 million of them engage in quite
safely during the year.



 

 

 

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