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UK: Blair plans U-turn on cannabis

Sophie Goodchild and Francis Elliott

The Independent on Sunday

Sunday 11 Dec 2005

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Tony Blair is planning a controversial U-turn on cannabis laws and the
reintroduction of tough penalties after an official government review
found a definitive link between use of the drug and mental illness.

The Independent on Sunday can reveal that the Advisory Council on the
Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) has detailed evidence showing cannabis triggers
psychosis in regular users. The findings are expected be used by Mr
Blair to overturn the decision made two years ago to downgrade the drug.
The reports makes it "an open door" for ministers to change the law,
according to one official.

Mr Blair is keen to reverse the controversial decision to downgrade its
status from B to C, taken by David Blunkett. His successor as Home
Secretary, Charles Clarke, asked the Government's official advisory body
to reassess the classification of the drug after a public outcry.

A senior Whitehall aide said: "There is no barrier to reclassification
of cannabis on the grounds of political embarrassment. This was David
Blunkett's decision, not something agreed by the Cabinet."

Pressure for a U-turn will intensify once the ACMD report is published.
It will detail evidence that varieties of "skunk", high-strength strains
of cannabis, can cause psychosis in some people and that cannabis can
exacerbate the condition of users who are already mentally ill.

The Home Secretary will announce his official decision on the
classification next month. Officials say he is "minded" to restore the
drug's original B rating. Obstacles to a U-turn remain, however,
particularly the attitude of the police. Ministers must overcome police
fears that it will reduce their ability to focus on class A drugs such
as heroin.

Most senior officers supported the original decision to downgrade
because it helped them to focus on class A drugs.

The original decision to drop cannabis's status to C also reflected
advice that it carries a lower risk of addiction and health-related
problems than other drugs. However, fresh studies have since indicated
that there is a strong link between the drug and "psychotic symptoms".

A Danish study published in the British Journal of Psychiatry found that
almost half of patients treated for a cannabis-related mental disorder
went on to develop a schizophrenic illness. People who had used the drug
developed schizophrenia earlier than those with the illness who had not
smoked marijuana.

In light of these new warnings, Mr Clarke asked the ACMD in March this
year to review the classification of cannabis. The committee took
evidence from police, mental health campaigners and drugs education
charities. One area of investigation has been the harms of new strains
of cannabis known as "skunk", which have high levels of
tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) - the chemical which gives users a "high".

Although the ACMD does not believe that the health risks justify
cannabis being moved back to class B, it does draw attention in its
report to the health impacts of a rise in the use of skunk, which has
been fuelled by increasing numbers of people growing their own marijuana.

Despite reports that cannabis use is rising, official figures show that
use among 16- to 24-year-olds has gradually fallen over the past seven
years.

Although it is a class C drug, cannabis possession, production and
supply are still illegal, although the penalties have been reduced.

The maximum penalty for possession has been reduced to two years'
imprisonment. Most offences of cannabis possession now result in a
warning and confiscation of the drug.

 

 

 

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