|
Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:
|
|
UK: Bill to legalise cannabis goes up in smoke Greg Hurst The Times Friday 26 Oct 2001 AN attempt by a Labour MP to legalise the personal use of cannabis failed yesterday as his Private Member's Bill was talked out in the Commons. Jon Owen Jones (Lab, Cardiff Central) published his Bill before this week's announcement by David Blunkett, the Home Secretary, that possession of cannabis will no longer be an arrestable offence. Mr Jones, a former Welsh Office Minister, tried to go further, saying that the cultivation of cannabis should be lawful for recreational and medicinal use. He advocated licensing systems for the importation of cannabis and its commercial cultivation. The MP said: 'All over the developed world - with the exception of Sweden and the American Federal Government - governments are slowly taking incremental steps that can only result in full legalisation. I confidently believe that cannabis will one day be legalised.' Mr Jones joked that the Palace of Westminster might one day have a cannabis coffee shop, like those in Amsterdam, running alongside its late-night bars and cigarette machines. The MP described the plight of a constituent diagnosed with haemophilia at birth who had been contaminated by blood transfusions with HIV, hepatitis C and possibly vCJD, and smoked cannabis to dull the pain and help him to sleep. 'However hard I have looked, I cannot find any justice or any rationality in the state's treatment of this man and I am glad that the Home Secretary has acknowledged that,' he said. The illegal trade in cannabis, estimated at £1.5 billion a year, simply financed organised crime and brought youngsters into contact with suppliers of hard drugs, Mr Jones said. The former Sports Minister Tony Banks supported the Bill. He said that he had never tried cannabis but that he believed in personal freedom. Andrew Rosindell (C, Romford) opposed it, declaring: 'To legalise is to legitimise and to legitimise is to encourage.' The Bill ran out of parliamentary time and goes to the back of the queue for backbench legislation, rendering further progress unlikely.
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!