Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


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

Charity applauds cannabis rethink

Phil Coleman

News & Star, Cumbria

Tuesday 23 Oct 2001

---
Drugs: New Cumbria debate follows law change

THE GOVERNMENT'S decision yesterday to relax the
laws on cannabis was welcomed by a leading
Cumbrian drugs charity today.

In a House of Commons statement yesterday, Home
Secretary David Blunkett confirmed that the drug
now be re-classified so that pos-sessing it will
no longer be an arrestable offence.

In future, those caught with small amounts of
cannabis will be unlikely to face a prosecution.

Cannabis will be downgraded to a class C drug,
putting it in the same legal category as anti-
depressants and steroids.

Mr Blunkett will also now recomme-nd that
approval should be given for cannabis to be
made available medicinal use to help ease
conditions such as multiple sclerosis (MS).

The changes are already fuelling cannabis debate
in Cumbria.

Mr Blunkett's announcement was warmly welcomed
by drugs workers in Carlisle, and by Lezley
Gibson, the Alston MS sufferer who made
national headlines last year when a jury refused
to convict her of possessing the drug after she
convinced them she needed cannabis to ease her
symptoms.

"This is absolutely wonderful news," she said
today.

Family

"I've never been right since my trial. My
health has deteriorated and I've been worried
to death that they going to keep raiding my
house. I was treated as if I was some kind of
violent criminal.

"But it's not just the effect on me. It's
affected my whole family, ruining three years
of our family life.''

Last year, the county's recently retired chief
constable Colin Phillips triggered a national
debate on the issue when he said he would turn
a blind eye to cannabis use if he encountered
it at a party.

Paul Brown, director of the Carlisle-based
Cumbria Drug and Alcohol Advisory Service said:
"This re-classification is a sensible and
credible move, particularly with young people.

"If this means they will not acquire a criminal
record, that's a good thing."

But retired Carlisle policeman David Morton and
Carlisle city councillor, said he feared the
softening of the law could represent a first
step on a "slippery slope' towards even more
liberal drugs laws.


SIDEBOX: The Cannabis Debate

FOR: "THIS is a big step in the right direction.
Carrying cannabis should not be regarded as being
any different to carrying a packet of cigarettes
in your pocket. What somebody chooses to do with
their own body should not be an issue.

Cannabis helps people relax. Just compare that
to the way peo-ple can behave after downing four
or five pints. The only problem with cannabis is
the legal issue for people who use it.

There are also medicinal benefits of using
cannabis. My wife Lezley suffers from MS and gets
a lot of relief from muscle spasm and pain thanks
to cannabis. It's also a great reliever of stress.
People will now be able to take their medicine in
the knowledge that that knock on the door is less
likely to happen.

People appearing in court for possessing cannabis
is just ridiculous. It was ridiculous that people
were being stopped in the street and searched on
suspicion they possessed what is basically a plant.

I now want to see the full legali-sation of
cannabis, There should be premises where it can be
supplied to people, along the lines of the Dutch
model."
*Mark Gibson, who was the Parliamentary candidate
for the Legalise Cannabis Alliance in the Penrith
and the Border constituency.


AGAINST: "IN my view reclassifying cannabis to
make it a class C drug is all but decriminalising
it.

It will no longer be an arrestable offence to
possess it. My view about drugs is simple: if
they are not using them for medicinal reasons,
they should-n't be using them at all.

It will mean less work for the police. But there's
always a dan-ger that one drug can lead to another.
If people develop a lik-ing for a particular drug,
their system may eventually become immune to it,
and if they no longer get a kick out of it, they
may look for something stronger.

The reclassification of cannabis could he the
first step on a slippery slope. Where will it
lead? People will be saying that amphetamine is
harmless and that we should reclassify that.

If cannabis is effectively legalised, it will
knock the bottom out of the market, and dealers
will look at pushing other drugs. It could
increase the supply of harder drugs."
*David Morton, Belt city councillor and retired
police officer





 

 

 

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!