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UK: Dutch model for UK drug laws

Nick Paton Walsh

The Observer

Sunday 23 Dec 2001

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Ministers have demanded changes to Britain's drug laws that would allow
officials to focus on the treatment rather than arrest of drug users.

In a significant change of policy, they have used the Netherlands as a
model to demand the prescription of heroin and an end to the prosecution
of people who grow cannabis for themselves.

The Home Office told Parliament last week that it had reversed the
Government's hardline stance on prosecution of drug users. Minister Bob
Ainsworth announced new elements to the drugs strategy, including:

- Focusing on treatment for drug users - known as 'harm minimisation' -
rather than their prosecution 'to minimise the harm that drugs do to
individuals and their families'. Some campaigners will see the move as
effectively decriminalising possession of drugs.

- Advising senior police to focus on dealers, not users, asking them to
'pay the highest regard to the more serious crimes of trafficking and
possession with intent to supply'.

- Government plans for new measures to prescribe heroin to addicts.

The Department of Health also told the science and technology select
committee that police should not prosecute people who grow cannabis for
their own use. This contrasts with the Home Office's recommendations to
the Runciman inquiry into drug laws which demanded jail for growers. The
offence carries a maximum sentence of 14 years in prison.

The Home Office had insisted that a 'soft approach' to drug possession
was not an option. Experts say the Government should be seen to be tough
on drugs and related crime, while addressing the problem of placing
increasing numbers of users in jail.

Roger Howard, director of the Government-backed charity DrugScope, said
the emphasis on harm reduction was 'a pragmatic and sensible step. The
Government has recognised that a crime-led response to drug use has not
been effective and that other options must be explored.

'If this includes lesser punishments for cultivation of small amounts of
cannabis for personal use, thereby diverting trade away from organised
crime, so much the better,' he said.

A Home Office spokesman said the measures were an expansion of plans
outlined by the Home Secretary, David Blunkett, last month. Although the
focus would be on 'harm minimisation', Dutch cannabis cafes were not
being considered. The Home Office 'does not want to encourage people to
smoke cannabis', she said.

'We recognise that people will always want to take drugs. We want to
make sure they have the information and help to ensure their safety.'

nick.walsh@observer.co.uk


 

 

 

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