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UK: A Charter For The Dealers

Evening News Comment

Manchester Evening News

Tuesday 23 Oct 2001

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Campaigners who have pressed for the relaxation of laws governing the possession
and use of cannabis will no doubt welcome Home Secretary David Blunkett's
proposal to re-classlify it from a class "B" to a class "C" drug.

His stated aims - to free the police to concentrate on harder drugs, and improve
the current laws to "make more senses" to people on the street - seem logical as
far as they go, but what practical difference will reclassification make, other
than to signal that smoking dope is OK?

But is it? What do we know about its physiological effects? How many joints
will make it unsafe to drive? In current reality, arrests for cannabis
possession have been few and far between in recent times. Even under Mr
Blunkett's proposals, possession will remain a criminal offence, theoretically
punishable by a two-year jail term.

While we welcome the likelihood of licensing cannabis use for medical conditions
like multiple sclerosis, what the Home Secretary appears to be suggesting in the
rest of his plan is that cannabis should remain illegal, but its use will be
tolerated by the authorities turning a blind eye.

This is a worst-case scenario; an invitation to flout the law with the police
losing the power to arrest.

Moreover its supply - certainly the large-scale importation of the drug - will
remain within the domain of organised crime. Put simply, to smoke cannabis, a
user must buy it and ultimately, somehwere along the line the supply chain,
there will be major criminal activity.

One of the key arguments advanced for the legalisation of cannabis has been that
it would divorce the "soft" drug's supply from that of dangerous narcotics like
heroin and crack cocaine. Mr Blunkett's proposals altogether fail to address
this point, leaving an unsatisfactory half-way house and, in the words of former
Conservative home office minister Ann Widdecombe, "a dealers charter".


 

 

 

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