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Smokey Signals From Home Secretary

Don Barnard

Press Release

Tuesday 09 Jul 2002

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Press Release from Legalise Cannabis Alliance
http://www.lca-uk.org
Tel: Press Officer: Don Barnard 0798 4255015

The Home Secretary, David Blunkett, announced on 10 July that he intended
to reclassify cannabis as a class C drug whilst raising the maximum
sentence on class C drugs from 5 to 14 years. This will mean that although
the maximum sentence for possession of cannabis will be 2 years, instead of
5, the maximum for supply of cannabis will no change. The Home Secretary
did not refer to sentences for cultivation.

Cannabis will join a list of pharmaceuticals such as valium and steroids,
as a class C drug under the 1971 Misuse of Drugs Act, despite the fact that
it is a plant.

Many cannabis campaigners and professionals are disappointed with the
announcement and concerned that although there may appear to be some
progression in thought, the results may be negative, for there will still
be no legal supply routes and no safe place for users to interact socially
as do people who choose to drink alcohol.

Alun Buffry, National coordinator for the Legalise Cannabis Alliance,
apolitical party since 1999, said:"I cannot see how these changes will help
anyone except maybe the police who will save time through not having to
arrest and process people caught with small amounts of cannabis.

"I find the proposals very unclear in the message. On the one hand Mr
Blunkett is saying that although cannabis is a dangerous drug (offering no
evidence), it is less dangerous than other class B drugs, so penalties for
possession will be reduced; on the other hand he is saying that the penalty
for suppling cannabis will become the same for class C as for class B.

"He seems to have forgotten that supply is driven by demand and
uncontrollable if left outside of the law. It is also highly profitable
and untaxable. With a lesser penalty on possession it is likely that more
people will smoke cannabis more openly, thus introducing it to more others.
This will lead to an increase in demand.

"If users are not allowed to grow it then they can only buy it illegally.
The question is: what sort of people are going to sell what sort of
cannabis? If we are not careful the less discernable cannabis supplier
will find a gateway to offer hard drugs.

"Only legalisation - bringing it within the law - can separate cannabis
from hard drugs. This sort of half-measure and political appeasement will
achieve little - especially little by delaying the change another 12
months. People should be allowed to grow it.

"I can only wonder what smoke signals are the Government sending us?"

NOTES FOR EDITORS

Alun Buffry tel: 01603 442215



 

 

 

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