Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

UK: Minister praises Brixton cannabis scheme

The BBC

Tuesday 06 Nov 2001

---
A home office minister has praised the relaxed cannabis laws being piloted
in Brixton.

Bob Ainsworth, on a visit to the area, said the introduction of a trial
project in the London borough of Lambeth in July had so far been a success.

Under the six-month pilot scheme, people caught with cannabis are cautioned
and not arrested.

And according to Government figures, this has saved 650 police hours already.

Mr Ainsworth said: "I think the kind of problems here are a strong
justification for the direction in which our policy is going. It's early
days for the scheme but signs are encouraging."

During his visit, the minister was taken to a drugs den by police officers,
where two addicts slept amid a debris of needles and squalor.

Mr Ainsworth said: "I've seen things like that on television but I have
never seen them at first hand.

"I was aware that this kind of thing existed but actually to see it in
reality was quite a shock."

Since the start of the experiment, 218 people have been officially warned
for the possession of cannabis compared with 168 people arrested in the
same period of time last year.

But the Metropolitan Police said reliable results would not be available
until February.

Hard drugs

The government visit coincided with a meeting between pro-legalisation
groups and the all-party Homes Affairs Select Committee.

The MPs were expected to hear arguments in favour of decriminalising all
drug use from campaigners including civil rights groups Liberty, Transform
and the Legalise Cannabis Alliance.

But Mr Ainsworth was keen to stress that the Government wanted to target
more resources at dealing with offences relating to class A drugs.

And he denied the scheme was a step towards the legalisation of cannabis.

He said: "We have a high cannabis use in this country - it is the illegal
substance used more than any other.

"Cannabis remains illegal, it will be confiscated and users will be
cautioned, they will be committing a criminal offence."

Supporters have suggested that Lambeth could serve as a possible model for
reform in other parts of the country.

'Travesty'

Danny Kushlick from drug reform group Transform said the meeting with the
Home Affairs Select Committee was a valuable opportunity.

It is our job to...show the committee why so many European states have
already decriminalised the possession of all drugs and why Switzerland and
Holland are now seeking to legalise the supply of cannabis."

Mr Kushlick said Home Office evidence to the committee had been a
"travesty", adding: "Their evidence has manipulated data to support an
untenable position."

Downgrading

The Home Office said that in the past six months the rate of class A
drug-related offences being dealt with by the courts has risen by 45%.

But last month Home Secretary David Blunkett announced he would consult
with the Advisory Council about the possibility of reclassifying cannabis
from class B to class C.

That would mean possession of small amounts of cannabis would no longer be
an arrestable offence.

Last week the committee also faced a strong rebuke from chairman Chris
Mullin MP.

He attacked members' failure to look at the arguments surrounding radical
measures, including the legalisation of all drugs.

 

 

 

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!