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UK: Cannabis should remain Class C

BBC News

Thursday 03 Apr 2008

Source: BBC News
Date: April 3 2008

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The official body which advises the government on drugs policy has
decided cannabis should remain a Class C drug, the BBC understands.

The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs' decision would appear to go
against the view of Gordon Brown, who favours returning the drug to Class B.

The government asked the council to review cannabis's legal status amid
concerns over stronger forms of it.

The council refused to confirm or deny a decision.

Chairman Professor Sir Michael Rawlins said a report would be sent to
Home Secretary Jacqui Smith this month.

University study

BBC home affairs correspondent Danny Shaw said the decision was taken at
a private meeting of the council, which discussed some significant new
research from Keele University about links between cannabis and mental
illness.

The study found nothing to support a theory that rising cannabis use in
the 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s led to increases in the incidence of
schizophrenia later on.

MAXIMUM DRUG PENALTIES
Class A: Seven years for possession, life for supplying
Class B: Five years for possession, 14 for supplying
Class C: Two years for possession, 14 for supplying

The Advisory Council's decision leaves the government in an awkward
position, our correspondent adds.

Gordon Brown has indicated he favours transferring cannabis back to
Class B to send a message about the dangers of the drug, particularly to
teenagers.

If the government does reclassify, it would be rejecting the findings of
the Advisory Council's panel of 23 drug experts, which has never
happened before on a decision about drug classification.

Mental health charity Sane was one group which gave evidence to the
advisory group.

Marjorie Wallace from the charity said not enough was yet known about
the direct links between cannabis and the brain, particularly the
developing brain.

She said she has heard of hundreds of cases where people have smoked
cannabis heavily, in particular the stronger form of skunk, and gone on
to suffer psychotic breakdowns, hallucinations, paranoia and feelings of
fear.

"Young people are literally dicing with their minds and futures," she
told BBC News.

"And if you have ever seen someone who has taken heavy cannabis and gone
on a trip from which they have never really returned and you have seen
the collateral damage to them and their families, then you have to look
at it from that point of view."

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7327702.stm

 

 

 

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