Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


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

UK: Dealers 'exploiting' cannabis change

BBC News

Tuesday 22 Jan 2002

---

Government plans to relax the laws on cannabis are being
exploited by dealers trying to sell harder drugs, warns the
Police Federation.

The federation is giving evidence on Tuesday to the Commons
home affairs select committee, which is conducting an
inquiry into drugs policy in the UK.

Home Secretary David Blunkett last year announced he was
proposing cannabis be reclassified as a class C, rather
than class B, drug.

That would put cannabis on the same legal footing as
anabolic steroids but is a step short of legalising the
drug.

Fred Broughton, chairman of the Police Federation, said the
vast majority of specialist drug officers nationwide were
opposed both to decriminalising and reclassifying cannabis.

'Wrong message'

Moves towards reclassification had caused confusion in many
places, argued Mr Broughton.

"Young people were telling everybody that cannabis is now
OK, that it is OK to possess in the streets, in schools,"
he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.

"It seems the wrong message went out to those young people.

"The street dealers seem to be exploiting the situation in
many places by basically carrying small pieces of cannabis
and using that as a cover for dealing in more dangerous
drugs."

'Mood of confusion'

Under a pilot project in Brixton, south London, people
caught in possession of small amounts of cannabis are being
cautioned rather than arrested.

Mr Broughton said before the reclassification plans police
and courts nationwide had begun to see cannabis possession
as less serious than other drug offences in a move towards
"policing by consent".

But the mood now, with more radical proposals being
considered by the Commons committee, had led to confusion,
he said.

MPs on the committee will also hear evidence from the
National Drug Prevention Alliance, which opposes relaxing
drug laws, and Baroness Susan Greenfield, professor at the
Oxford University's Department of Pharmacology.


 

 

 

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!