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UK: Cannabis laws eased in drug policy shakeup

Alan Travis, home affairs editor

The Guardian

Tuesday 23 Oct 2001

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Britain's 30-year-old cannabis laws, the most
stringent in Europe, are to be relaxed by next
spring under plans announced yesterday by the
home secretary, David Blunkett.

Cannabis - which is tried by more than 40% of
British schoolchildren - is to be downgraded
from a class B to a class C drug. The police
will lose the power to arrest the 90,000 people
a year who are currently charged with possession
offences.

Alongside the reform of the 1971 cannabis laws,
Mr Blunkett announced a new emphasis on reducing
the harm caused by hard drugs, including
guidance encouraging doctors to prescribe heroin
as part of a programme to get more hardcore
addicts into treatment and away from dealers.

The home secretary also gave his firmest
indication yet that he will license the medical
use of cannabis to treat multiple sclerosis and
other illnesses when research trials, which are
currently in their third phase, are completed.

But the shake-up of the drug laws, designed to
win back credibility with the young, stops short
of the decriminalisation or legalisation of
cannabis. Mr Blunkett's decision to reclassify
it as a class C drug means that it remains
illegal but the maximum penalties of two years
for possession and five years for possession
with intent to supply will be much lower than
the current penalties of five and 14 years.

The police will no longer have the power to
arrest anyone in the street for cannabis
possession and prosecutions will be carried
out by court summons. This is likely to mean
that prosecution will prove the exception
rather than the rule for simple possession.

The reforms are expected to come into effect
in the spring, after they have been considered
by the advisory council on the misuse of drugs.
This group of experts first recommended the
change as long ago as 1981. Ministers will
implement the change by an order in council
after a debate in parliament.

It is also in line with the recommendation of
the Police Foundation inquiry into drugs, which
was dismissed by ministers when it was
published last year. But Mr Blunkett yesterday
rejected the inquiry's recommendations to
downgrade ecstasy and LSD from their class A
status.

The home secretary told MPs yesterday that the
changes would not detract from the simple
message that all drugs were harmful but it
would make a clearer distinction between
cannabis and class A drugs such as heroin and
cocaine.

"Cannabis would remain a controlled drug and
using it a criminal offence," he said. "Above
all, it would make sense to both those policing
the system and those providing education and
advice to prevent young people falling into
addiction.

"In spite of focusing on hard drugs, the
majority of police time is currently spent on
handling cannabis offences. It is time for an
honest and commonsense approach focusing
effectively on drugs that cause the most harm."

Mr Blunkett said the six-month experiment in
Brixton under which the police did not charge
those found with cannabis was proving a success,
with the two to three hours usually spent on
processing such convictions in the past now
spent targeting more serious crimes.

Suspicion of cannabis possession will no longer
be grounds for police stop and search, a Home
Office spokesman said. Offenders could be dealt
with on the spot with an informal warning,
cautioned or reported for summons.

Chris Sanders of the Cannabis Coalition welcomed
the move to reclassify cannabis, describing it
as a small step to progress, and Paul Flynn, the
Labour MP who has campaigned for legalisation,
called it the most important announcement in 30
years of drug policy. "We have the harshest drug
policies in Europe," he said. "This is the first
time we have seen a government prepared to say
they are not working."

The police also welcomed the change. Sir John
Stevens, the Metropolitan police commissioner,
said: "Reclassification could reduce the time
spent by officers dealing with such offenders,
enabling them to concentrate on tackling more
serious crimes such as street robbery which has
increased in London in recent months."

But the former shadow home secretary Ann
Widdecombe, who caused embarrassment for the
Tory party when she proposed much tougher
cannabis laws, said that the changes were in
danger of becoming a "dealers' charter" as they
could escape prosecution by claiming a large
amount in their possession was for their personal
use.


 

 

 

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