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UK: 'Let Beleagured Farmers Grow Cannabis'

David Barrett

The Independent

Wednesday 17 Oct 2001

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A Labour MP is launching a Private Member's Bill
to legalise personal use of cannabis - arguing
that beleaguered British farmers could grow it
as a cash crop.

Jon Owen Jones said the measure would "remove
criminals from the equation" and could provide
a "hardy cash crop" for British farmers, left
on their knees by foot-and-mouth disease, BSE,
tumbling dairy prices and concerns over GM crops.

The Cardiff Central MP's Legalisation of Cannabis
Bill is due to be debated in the House of Commons
next week, but is highly unlikely to become law.

However, it comes after a noticeable shift in
public attitudes to the drug.

MPs who have spoken out in favour of liberalising
the drug laws include former Tory Cabinet minister
Peter Lilley. And the first official pilot project
where police turn a blind eye to possession of the
drug began this summer in south London.

The Bill would legalise the personal cultivation
of cannabis and its use for therapeutic and
recreational purposes. A Government licensing system
would also be set up for commercial cultivation of
cannabis and for international trade in the drug.

Mr Jones said: "All over the world it is becoming
clear that cannabis use is a fact of life and
trying to deal with it through the criminal justice
system is absurd.

"Legalisation is the most rational way forward."

The Bill, drafted in conjunction with the civil
rights group Liberty, is backed by MPs from all
three main political parties.

Mark Littlewood, director of campaigns at Liberty,
said: "The public don't want our police force
frittering their energies over a victimless 'crime'
like cannabis use.

"Our drug laws are arcane and outdated. As the
Home Secretary himself has hinted, they need
urgent review.".

Mr Jones's proposals come as a cross-party House
of Commons committee is due to begin investigating
the possible decriminalisation of hard and soft
drugs.

The Home Affairs Select Committee will question
whether current drug rules are failing. It has not
limited its remit to the liberalisation of cannabis
and will also discuss decriminalising Class A drugs
such as heroin and crack cocaine.

MPs will examine the possible impact such a move
would have on crime, drug-related deaths and demand.

Members will also examine whether decriminalisation
is desirable and, if not, discuss "practical
alternatives".

There have been growing backbench calls for
liberalisation of cannabis laws.

Mr Lilley, ex-deputy leader of the Tory party,
envisaged magistrates issuing licences for outlets
selling cannabis to over-18s.

In July police in Lambeth, south London, became the
first to turn a blind eye to possession of small
amounts of cannabis, dealing with the offence by
a verbal warning rather than arrest.

Downing Street has firmly resisted any
liberalisation of the drug laws, although Home
Secretary David Blunkett has said there should
be an "adult, intelligent" debate on the issue.

Mr Jones said he had yet to meet anyone with a
valid argument for continued prohibition of
therapeutic use of the drug.

His Bill proposed legalising recreational use
as well because of the positive effect it would
have on crime and other aspects of society.

"If you are going to make a drug legal you may
as well make it properly legal," he said at
today's launch of the Bill in Westminster.

"Decriminalisation does not alleviate the
problem of corruption and very powerful and
wealthy importers.

"We've had a drugs tsar for three years. He's
down and he's gone already but the position is
worse than when we started.

"The harm caused by prohibition is far greater
than the harm the drug causes."

He cited an example given to him by a senior
policeman, who said his force arrested 12 major
suppliers - but that within a week levels of
supply were back to normal.

However, there was even more violence on the
streets as new drug lords fought for the "vacant"
territory.

Mr Jones said legalisation would remove such
problems, as two-thirds of Britain's drug market
was cannabis and his legislation would undermine the
whole drugs trade and reduce the risk of cannabis
users being wooed onto harder drugs by dealers.

Conservative MP David Cameron, a member of the
Home Affairs Select Committee, who attended the
launch, told PA News: "I welcome the debate
because it is one we need to have.

"I'm going to be looking carefully at the
arguments before I make up my mind."

He asked Mr Jones to submit all his evidence
to the committee, which is due to begin its
own major inquiry into Britain's drugs laws
later this month.


 

 

 

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