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UK: Law is root cause of drug problem, MPs are told

Marie Woolf

The Independent

Wednesday 07 Nov 2001

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Drug reform campaigners told MPs investigating Britain's drugs laws
yesterday that existing legislation was at the root of the drugs problem
and not the substances themselves.

Witnesses in favour of liberalising drug legislation were giving evidence
to the all-party Home Affairs Select Committee.

Danny Kushlick, director of the drug reform group, Transform, said
prohibition of all drugs should be swept away because the black market led
users to commit crime and take impure substances. He said the law should be
changed to allow hard and soft drugs to be supplied by licensed retailers,
by pharmacies or by prescription.

A journalist, Nick Davies, who has made documentaries and written
extensively on the drug issue, said: "The worst that can happen is that we
would end up with a tiny sliver of the black market that we have now.

"The main thing is to bring drugs into the mainstream where we can see
them, and give people correct information on the side of packets, so they
know what they are taking." Mr Davies said heroin was a "benign drug" which
was dangerous only because it was supplied by criminals who often
adulterated it with other substances. "Heroin is very addictive," he said,
"but it does not damage the mind or body of its users."

A former police chief, Francis Wilkinson, also supported the calls for
reform by saying that doctors should be allowed to supply heroin to users.

Writing a pamphlet for the Centre for Reform, Mr Wilkinson, a former chief
constable of Gwent, said "the only way" to reduce the crime committed by
addicts was "to supply heroin officially to users in a way that will
minimise the leakage of those supplies." He called for a radical rethink of
the law on drugs in the pamphlet, Heroin: The Failure of Prohibition And
What To Do, which was endorsed by Sir David Ramsbotham, a former chief
inspector of prisons, who said the time was right "for something different
to be tried".

According to the Government, the courts have recorded a 45 per cent rise in
offences related to class A drugs.

Bob Ainsworth, a Home Office minister, told the committee about a
"shocking" visit he made to a drugs den in Brixton during a trip to the
south London borough of Lambeth to check on the progress of a pilot scheme
under which cannabis users detected by police are issued with an instant
caution but not arrested.

The minister was shown a derelict building which Brixton police suspected
was a drugs den. The floor was covered with used syringe needles and
rubbish, and two people, suspected of being drug users, were sleeping
there. "I've seen things like that on television but I have never seen them
at first hand," said Mr Ainsworth.

"I was aware this kind of thing existed but actually to see it in reality
was quite a shock. The kind of problems in Brixton are at the sharp end of
drug problems."

 

 

 

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