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UK: Cannabis less risky than alcohol, says official report

Ian Burrell

The Independent

Friday 15 Mar 2002

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The Government's drug advisers reported yesterday that cannabis was less
addictive than either tobacco or alcohol, a significant step towards the
decriminalisation of Britain's most widely used illicit substance.

The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs backed an earlier proposal by
the Home Secretary, David Blunkett, that cannabis should be downgraded to a
Class C drug, which in effect makes its possession a non-arrestable offence.

The council said in its report: "Regular heavy use of cannabis can result
in dependence, but its dependence potential is substantially less than that
of Class B drugs such as amphetamine or, indeed, that of tobacco or
alcohol."The council also undermined claims by anti-drugs campaigners that
cannabis was a dangerous "gateway" drug that led users to experiment with
harder and more addictive illicit substances.

"It is not possible to state, with certainty, whether or not cannabis use
predisposes users to dependence on Class A drugs such as heroin or crack
cocaine," its report said. "Nevertheless the risks (if any) are small, and
less than those associated with the use of tobacco or alcohol."

Backing the first relaxation of Britain's drug laws in 30 years, the
council said: "The high use of cannabis is not associated with major health
problems for the individual or society."

The council pointed out that it was not claiming that cannabis use was
harmless; it posed "significant dangers" for people with disorders of the
heart and circulation, and for those with mental health problems such as
schizophrenia.

But it said such people were "at much more significant risk" from
amphetamines, which are also categorised as Class B. The council said: "The
continuing juxtaposition of cannabis with these more harmful Class B drugs
erroneously (and dangerously) suggests that their harmful effects are
equivalent."

The reclassification of cannabis, however, will not take place immediately.
The Government will postpone its final decision until after consideration
of the findings of a full-scale inquiry into drugs that has been carried
out by the House of Commons' Home Affairs Select Committee.

Ministers, who have not yet received the committee's report, will also
examine evaluation reports of a pilot project in Lambeth, south London,
where police have already adopted a policy of not arresting people for
possession of small amounts of cannabis.

Iain Duncan Smith, the Conservative Party leader, said the proposals to
relax the cannabis laws had not been well thought out.

"Anybody who knows about the difficulties in communities - about young
people who are trying drugs, and moving on to harder drugs - knows that it
is far more complex than that," he said.

But Simon Hughes, the Liberal Democrat spokesman on home affairs, called on
the Government to relax the laws even further. "If the Government accepts
the advisory council's recommendation, it should also decide that it is not
in the public interest to prosecute people for small-scale possession of
cannabis for personal use," he said.

 

 

 

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