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Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:
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UK: Home Office Is Cool On Drug Report
Stewart Tendler, Crime Correspondent The Times
Friday 03 May 2002 HOME OFFICE ministers reacted coolly yesterday to a proposal from chief constables to send heroin and cocaine users for treatment rather than prosecute them. As drug treatment charities backed the announcement from the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo), the Home Office welcomed the report but did not endorse it. Ministers are understood to be unconvinced about the idea of giving hard drug users a choice between treatment or conviction. However, they are believed to welcome the general police support for drugs treatment which chimes with government policy. At present that aims to offer treatment on charge or conviction for a drug offence. Ministers also welcomed the decision by chief constables not to call for Ecstasy to be declassified from a class A and to a class C drug. However, there was no comment on the decision by chief constables to recommend a softer approach to cannabis possession which would allow many users to escape with a simple warning. Kevin Morris, president of the Police Superintendents' Association, backed the Acpo statement yesterday. He said: "We have said all along that the current tactics are not working and have to be a bit more imaginative." Lesley King-Lewis, chief executive for Action on Addiction, said research showed that every UKP 1 spent on drug treatment saved UKP 3 which would have been spent in fighting crimes linked to drugs. Roger Howard, of DrugScope, said: "We hope that this will lead in the future to drugs, more often, being treated as a health rather than a criminal justice issue." Ann Widdecombe, the former Shadow Home Secretary, said: "We should ask how are we going to protect, particularly, the younger generation, from the evils of something as serious as heroin which it is now proposed is no longer treated as a criminal offence. We must be mad."
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