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UK: Blair accused of holding back reform of drug laws

Marie Woolf, Chief Political Correspondent

The Independent

Saturday 10 Nov 2001

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A former Labour minister has blamed Tony Blair for slowing the pace of
reform of the law on drugs.

Tony Banks said yesterday he felt the Government was not "going anywhere
near far enough" on decriminalising drug use, adding that this was
"probably due to the reluctance of the Prime Minister.

"I don't know what Mr Blair did at university," the MP for West Ham
said. "But he clearly didn't get up to any naughty things whatsoever and
we're all glad for that." Mr Banks said the Home Secretary's proposal to
reduce the penalty for the personal use of cannabis was a "small and
timid step".

Yesterday MPs from all parties called for softer penalties for people
who used drugs on a recreational basis or grew them for their own
consumption.

In an impassioned debate, Simon Hughes, the Liberal Democrat home
affairs spokesman, called for the decriminalisation of the recreational
use of all drugs by individuals, including ecstasy and cocaine.

Mr Hughes, who represents Southwark North and Bermondsey, said that the
police should concentrate on prosecuting drug dealers. "People who are
recreational drug users we should treat as citizens. People who are
addicts we should treat as victims because they need help," he said.
"It's people who are the pushers, the dealers, the traffickers who are
criminals. It seems to me that the personal use of recreational drugs
should not be criminal."

The veteran drugs reform campaigner Paul Flynn, Labour MP for Newport
West, said that the Government's failure to reform the drug laws had led
to the deaths of at least 5,000 people.

He said that jurors who had refused to convict seriously ill people who
have used cannabis to relieve their pain had outpaced the Government.

Mr Flynn said one of his constituentshad been forced to buy drugs for
her son on the street because of the lack of medical support.

European countries that had liberalised drug laws had seen consumption,
even of hard drugs drop, he said. "In Holland, in every category,
there's less use of drugs than there is here," he said. "What we are
doing here with prohibition is killing our young people. Last year in
this country 59 people were killed by prohibition. They were killed
because their heroin was contaminated."

The Home Office minister Robert Ainsworth said: "If the availability of
drugs such as cocaine and heroin increases substantially, the chances of
children aged 10 getting into problems with these drugs, as I did with
tobacco, must increase as well."



 

 

 

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