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UK: MPs: Scrap useless drug classification

Sophie Goodchild and Angela Foster

The Independent

Sunday 30 Jul 2006

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The current harm-rating system for drugs, including ecstasy and
cannabis, is outdated, confused and should be scrapped, according to an
influential committee of MPs.

A hard-hitting report from the Science and Technology Committee,
published tomorrow, is expected to say that classifying drugs within a
hierarchy of harm, with A the most serious and C the least, has done
nothing to deter drug use or supply since being introduced more than 30
years ago.

It is understood that MPs will highlight an alternative system suggested
by scientific experts based on a "harm spectrum", where issues such as
the age of the user, their medical history and how the drug is consumed
are all taken into account when assessing risk.

The committee's recommendations, which will be presented to the
Government, are based on evidence taken from police, scientists and
experts from drugs charities. This is the first review of the current
drugs classification system to be carried out since it was introduced in
1971.

Drugs are classified as A, B or C, with different penalties according to
the harm caused and whether the drug is likely to be misused. The Home
Secretary decides what harm rating individual drugs should be given
based on evidence provided by advisers, who assess the drugs according
to the problems they cause to society and users.

For example, class A drugs such as heroin and cocaine carry a maximum
sentence of seven years in prison for possession and a life sentence for
supply or intent to supply. Class B drugs carry a five-year sentence for
possession or 14 years for supply. Class C drugs, which include anabolic
steroids and cannabis, carry a two-year sentence with 14 years for supply.

The classification of individual drugs can change over time if new
evidence shows that they pose a greater or lesser risk to society. David
Blunkett, the former home secretary, reclassified cannabis from a class
B to a class C drug in January 2004 in response to advice from the
Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs.

But his successor, Charles Clarke, came under huge pressure to move the
drug back to class B status earlier this year when he was Home
Secretary, following new medical evidence linking cannabis use to mental
health problems.

Experts have long argued that some drugs have been placed in "arbitrary"
categories that do not reflect the truth about their harmful effects.
For example, some anti-drug campaigners have said that the club drug
ecstasy and magic mushrooms should not be in category A alongside heroin
and crack cocaine because they are less addictive.

Mr Clarke commissioned a consultation paper earlier this year on drugs
classification, but this is understood to have been put on hold since he
resigned from the Cabinet.

The MPs' report, called Making a Hash of It?, is understood to highlight
concerns that the current system is irrelevant to modern society, where
recreational drug use is widespread; it warns that the system may even
be used as a quality guide by teenagers.

The drugs education charity Transform told MPs during an evidence
hearing that the grading system had "failed in quite spectacular
fashion", with drug use increasing over the past 45 years and illegal
substances becoming more widely available.

The committee was told the grading system influenced public opinion, the
media and politicians, so it was important to get it right, and that
drugs were too complex to be assessed under a rigid classification system.
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/article1204508.ece

 

 

 

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