Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


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

UK: Lib Dems vote to legalise cannabis and prescribe heroin to addicts

Marie Woolf in Manchester

Independent on Sunday

Sunday 10 Mar 2002

---

Liberal Democrats yesterday voted for the most radical drug policy of
any mainstream political party by voting to legalise the use of
marijuana and end jail sentencesfor possession of all other drugs,
including cocaine, ecstasy and heroin.

The supply and use of cannabis should be legalised and regulated, the
party decided, opening the door to an Amsterdam-style "coffee shop''
culture in Britain.

Prosecution for growing cannabis for personal use should be abolished
and adults who supply "spliffs'' to their friends should not be charged,
the party decided yesterday. Drugs such as ecstasy should be
reclassified from Class A to Class B.

In a heated debate at their Spring Conference in Manchester, delegates
voted to redirect police time to catching drug traffickers and to end
prison terms "for personal use of illegal drugs of any class".

They voted for stiffer penalties for dealers who sell drugs near schools
or psychiatric hospitals and to make roadside drug testing of motorists
official party policy. The vote, which would mean that the use of any
drug would no longer be a criminal offence, received overwhelming
support.

The Lib Dems committed themselves to renegotiating international
treaties "in the longer term'' to allow Britain to "put the supply of
cannabis on a legal regulated basis''. They also voted to accept an
amendment calling for doctors to be given the power to prescribe heroin
to addicts.

Yesterday, doctors and students joined MPs and barristers in voting to
liberalise Britain's drugs laws. Mark Simons, a member of Liberal
Democrat Youth and Students and a cannabis user, said it should be
"legalised as soon as possible". "Relaxing with a spliff is just as
natural as with a glass of wine,'' he said.

Chris Davies MEP, who is facing prosecution for possession of cannabis,
argued that devoting 70 per cent of drug-related police time to cannabis
users was "the policing priority of a madman''.

His view was supported by Dr James Walsh, a GP who said that it was
"hypocrisy'' to allow alcohol and tobacco use while outlawing cannabis.

The party also voted to make cannabis available by prescription for
medicinal use after drug trials.

Simon Hughes, Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman, said: "With so
many people using cannabis regularly it is self-delusion to pretend that
prohibition is working. The evidence is that cannabis does less harm
than many other current illegal drugs, let alone legal drugs such as
alcohol and tobacco."


 

 

 

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!