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UK: 'When it was secretive, people were violent. There were more muggings'

Andrew Johnson and Sophie Goodchild

Independent on Sunday

Sunday 10 Mar 2002

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Nine o'clock on Friday night and Brixton high street is buzzing.
Everyone is on their way home or on their way out for the night. But
just a minute's walk away, in Coldharbour Lane, there is another group
of people who are not going anywhere: the dealers. Hoods up against the
cold, they lean against shuttered shop fronts and railings, checking out
the passers-by.

Coldharbour Lane has always been the place to go in Brixton if you want
to buy drugs. Since last summer, the drug trade has become a lot more
visible. In a 100-yard stretch, there are at least 20 people carrying
out "business".

Nine months ago Lambeth police announced that possession of cannabis for
personal use would no longer be an arrestable offence. Officers were
frustrated at wasting valuable time hauling people off the streets when
they could be arresting cocaine and heroin dealers instead. So they
decided on a new approach: officers would just hand out on-the-spot
warnings.

December last year was the original expiry date for the scheme but
senior Met officials were so impressed they urged colleagues in Brixton
to carry on for the time being. Whether residents in the area are as
impressed as the police will become clear next month. This is when the
Police Foundation is expected to publish its findings.

Talent Mundy Castle, 48, runs a fruit and vegetable stall. "When it
[cannabis] was secretive people were violent," he said. "Now the number
of muggings has reduced. This was the most dangerous part of Brixton.
You couldn't stand here for long without being attacked. I don't smoke
but my husband does. He is 96."

An off-duty policewoman, who did not want to be named, has lived in
Brixton for five years. She said: "I am new to the Lambeth force and
wasn't here before the experiment started but it has saved an enormous
amount of time in paper-work. I'd prefer not to hassle people for
smoking cannabis. I have lived here for five or six years, and everybody
knows that people smoke it and that it doesn't bother anybody."


 

 

 

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