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Is the country going to pot?

Stacia Briggs

Evening News, Norwich

Wednesday 24 Oct 2001

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Our grandparents passed the port, but could
our children be the first to pass the pot?
STACIA BRIGGS asks if proposals to relax
cannabis laws are a step in the right direction
or a dangerous move.

LEGALISE cannabis? Has the country gone to
pot? Despite coming to power in 1997 with a
promise of "zero tolerance" towards drugs,
Labour has announced that Britain's stringent
cannabis laws are set to be relaxed next Spring.

David Blunkett has proposed that cannabis should
no longer be an arrestable offence and should be
reclassified as a class C drug, putting it in the
same category as anti-depressants or steroids.

Denying the move was decriminalisation and
stressing that cannabis would remain illegal,
Mr Blunkett said it would mean drugs laws "make
more sense on the street."

In practice, it means cannabis users will be
unlikely to face any consequence if they are
caught with small amounts of the drug.

A major motivation behind the new proposals is
the effect it will have on police resources
which are already pushed to their limits.

"When they are able to deal with people who are
pushing drugs, it will lighten their load and
make more sense on the streets than it does at
the moment", said Mr Blunkett. Kate Walsh,
press officer at the Norfolk Police, stressed
that reclassification of cannabis as a class C
drug did not mean it was decriminalised.

"It is very difficult to say what impact these
changes in the law will have on police
procedures until those changes are made
absolutely clear", she said.

"We will make changes when the ramifications
of the proposals are clear. I would imagine
there will be national guidelines issued that
will set out any new procedures."

If the reclassification of cannabis goes
ahead, it would put the whole country on the
same footing as a pilot scheme in south London
where police are "turning a blind eye" to
cannabis use.

Cannabis possession would be dealt with by
either a caution - which would go on a
criminal record - or by summons, which sees
the offender called to magistrates court to
face a possible fine, in the same way that
many driving offences are dealt with.

Peter Farley, director of the Norwich-based
advice agency The Matthew Project, is
concerned that reclassification could give
young people the impression that cannabis
use is without risk.

"There's no justification for tobacco being
legal and cannabis being illegal but my
concern is that this is sending out a message
especially to young people, that cannabis is
harmless," he said.

"It may be harmless to some people, but it's
clearly not to others. It can ruin people's
lives.

"Will there be government health warnings
issued similar to those that are on cigarette
packets? If not, the government is putting
itself in a position where it could be sued."

He added: "Legal, illegal or less illegal, we
will still continue to help the people who
have a problem with cannabis.

"We have seen a significant rise in the number
of people coming to us whose lives have been
totally wasted through the use of cannabis.
but then we also see people who have taken
the drug and avoided these problems."

Police officers will still be expected to
confiscate cannabis under the new ruling,
and supply and intent to supply will remain
offences for which people could be arrested
and face heavier penalties of up to 14 years
in jail.

The new maximum sentence for cannabis
possession will be two years. Derek
Williams of the UK Cannabis Internet Activists
believes Mr Blunkett's proposals are "too
little, too late" and should have been
introduced at least five years ago.
"Cannabis is finally being normalised and
it's the first step on the right road to
legalisation. I think we will see big changes
in the next six months and that cannabis use
will become more commonplace," he added.

"My concern is that supply of cannabis has
not been addressed. Supply is still in the
hands of criminals - the model of the
Amsterdam coffee shops is one that could
be replicated here.

"There also needs to be a harm reduction
policy advising people how they can lower
their health risks by taking cannabis
without using tobacco." The current
illegality of cannabis leaves Derek
unwilling to talk about whether he uses
the drug, but he hopes a day will come
when Norwich boasts its own coffee shops
openly supplying ready-rolled joints.

Alun Buffry, of the Legalise Cannabis
Alliance, also believes the proposals are
a move in the right direction. "I think
David Blunkett has been quite brave.

"I think in real terms it will mean people
will be able to smoke more openly and less
will be prosecuted," he said.

Having served two concurrent prison
sentences in 1991 for conspiracy to import
and supply cannabis, Alun is well aware of
the legal penalty of taking his drug of
choice. But he says the drug has not
affected his health.

"I have been using cannabis on and off for
the past 30 years and have suffered no ill
effects.

"I gave up smoking tobacco a few years ago
and immediately felt healthier, but when I
gave up cannabis for a while I didn't notice
the difference."


 

 

 

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