Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

UK: Don't use cannabis, says Cameron

BBC News

Monday 12 Feb 2007

---
David Cameron has advised people against taking drugs, following
newspaper allegations that he had smoked cannabis as a schoolboy.

Asked whether cannabis use was wrong, he said: "It is something I would
advise strongly against. Drug taking is against the law and it's wrong."

He has refused to confirm or deny the cannabis use claims, saying
politicians were entitled to a "private past".

But he has admitted there were things in his past that he regretted.

While on a trip to Stockholm on Monday, Mr Cameron was questioned about
the story - which surfaced in a book - serialised in the Independent on
Sunday.

Eton expulsions

Both the Independent and the Mail on Sunday reported that school
authorities called the police to investigate drug use among pupils at
Eton, 25 years ago.

They reported that a 15-year-old Mr Cameron was not expelled, as were
some other boys, because he had smoked cannabis but not sold it.

Asked about his views on cannabis use on Monday, Mr Cameron told the
BBC: "I have seen contemporaries, constituents who have got into
terrible trouble with drugs and their lives have gone into a downward
spiral.

"I have always said we need to have better drugs education in schools,
we need to have better treatment programmes so we can get addicts off
the streets and into treatment to cut the crime that they are committing
and make our society safer.

"So we need to have sensible drug policies in this country."

He added: "When younger, lots of people do things that they shouldn't -
I was one of them - and I regret those things but I think people should
judge me now on the policies we have put forward."

'So what?'

A number of Tory frontbenchers have spoken publicly to defend Mr Cameron
and to support his refusal to speak about his private life before politics.

And even Labour Home Secretary John Reid appeared to agree that
politicians were entitled to a private life before being elected to office.

"I think this is one of those 'so what' moments," he told the BBC's
Politics Show.

 

 

 

After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.




This page was created by the Cannabis Campaigners' Guide.
Feel free to link to this page!