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UK: Clarke to reject tougher cannabis law and opt for crackdown on

Nigel Morris

The Independent

Thursday 19 Jan 2006

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Charles Clarke is expected today to rule out toughening the law on
cannabis despite issuing a fresh warning over the health risk to heavy
users.

The Home Secretary will announce a nationwide campaign highlighting the
danger of smoking the drug and promise a renewed police crackdown on the
cannabis farms that meet the demand for it.

The Government announced a review last year of the decision by David
Blunkett, the former home secretary, to downgrade cannabis from a class
B to class C substance.

Mr Clarke and Tony Blair were sympathetic to calls to reverse the move,
admitting that the change had confused the public about the legal
position on drug possession. But they said they would take a decision on
the basis of scientific evidence and the Advisory Council on the Misuse
of Drugs (ACMD), which carried out the review, did not recommend
reclassification.

It concluded that there was a risk of developing schizophrenia through
use, but said it said it was "substantially less harmful" than other
drugs in the class B category.

Mr Clarke has been warned by some council members that they could resign
in protest if he reverses the reclassification, which took place in
January 2004.

The Home Secretary will tell MPs this afternoon that he is concerned
over evidence of the damage to health from long-term cannabis use. He
will promise a fresh publicity campaign highlighting the risks it
carries, with particular efforts to get the message into schools. The
campaign will also remind the public that reclassification has not made
cannabis legal and that possession in large quantities still attracts a
two-year prison sentence.

Mr Clarke will also announce a new effort by police to track down and
prosecute the country's main suppliers of the drug, who cultivate it in
large cannabis farms. They could be imprisoned for up to five years.

Two weeks ago the Home Secretary said he was worried by evidence that
the drug could damage mental health and was prepared "in principle" to
reverse his predecessor's decision.

He has privately remarked that it is one of the most difficult decisions
he has had to take in the job. The political pressure on him over the
issue, however, has been eased by the decision of the Tory leader, David
Cameron, not to support reclassification.Mr Cameron previously sat on
the Commons Home Affairs Select Committee, which supported designating
cannabis as class C. The Liberal Democrats support leaving cannabis as a
class-C drug and have protested that cannabis users are still being jailed.

The change from class B to class C two years ago was designed to enable
police to channel their efforts into tackling use of class-A drugs such
as heroin and cocaine.

The switch meant that although possession of cannabis remained illegal,
police were advised not to make arrests. They were told to confiscate
the drug and give a warning.

Medical experts and drug charities appear divided over the merits of
reclassification of cannabis. Martin Barnes, the chief executive of
Drugscope, has said. "Our view is that if the Government chooses not to
follow the advisory council's recommendation they've got to really have
pretty compelling reasons not to."

Lord Adebowale, the director of the drug treatment charity Turning Point
and a member of the ACMD, said: "I am increasingly concerned about the
politicisation of this - the playing to the gallery."

But the Royal College of Psychiatrists has pointed out that countries
with traditionally liberal attitudes to cannabis, such as the
Netherlands, are reviewing their laws. It has called on governments to
take a "strong stance towards cannabis abuse".

Marjorie Wallace, the chief executive of the mental health charity Sane,
said there was mounting evidence cannabis, especially in its more toxic
form of skunk, could cause long-term mental damage.

She said: "We do not wish to see more people in prison for possession.
But we must balance their interests against those of vulnerable young
people, for whom cannabis can mean a life-long sentence to illnesses
such as schizophrenia and depression. While we welcome the Home
Secretary's renewed pledge to a public education campaign, it will be
even harder now to convince young people that by taking cannabis they
are playing Russian roulette with their minds."

When Mr Clarke asked the ACMD to investigate the decision to reclassify
cannabis he highlighted worries of the link between its use and
psychosis. Mr Blair told the Commons: "If it advises us to change that
decision, we will do so. If it does not, we will obviously have to
consider that."

Ministers pointed out that there had been no increase in cannabis use
since it was downgraded. Sir Ian Blair, the Metropolitan Police
Commissioner, has said he does not want cannabis laws reversed as
dealing with small amounts of the drug wastes police time.

 

 

 

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