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UK: Pressure group plans to open cannabis cafe

Mary Murtagh

The Leicester Mercury

Wednesday 29 May 2002

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Campaigners for the legalisation of cannabis have announced plans to open a
"cannabis cafe" in Leicester where customers would openly smoke the drug.

Pressure group the Legalise Cannabis Alliance has announced plans to open
the cafe at an undisclosed location in the city in July.

It would be run by 31-year-old Chris Peabody from Leicestershire who
describes himself as a "sympathiser" to the campaign to legalise cannabis

But the Home Office today warned that he would be breaking existing laws
and police action could follow.

Mr Peabody said the cafe would run as a members-only club for over-18s. No
alcohol or drugs would be on sale but Mr Peabody would permit smoking
cannabis on the premises.

Mr Peabody said: "It will basically be a coffee shop with no alcohol or
drugs sold. If people chose to smoke cannabis in my shop I am not going to
stop them.

"I think the laws on cannabis are unjust. It bothers me greatly that it is
against the law but I believe that the law is wrong. I am willing to take
that risk.

"The shop will operate on a 'members only' scheme, allowing people to read,
relax, play games, like chess or Scrabble, and smoke cannabis in a safe and
peaceful environment.

"I, for one, would rather walk home knowing the people around me had been
smoking cannabis, rather than rowdy drunks looking for a fight.

"If no-one in Leicester thinks it is a good idea, I will shut the shop."

Inspector Daimon Tilley, in charge of city centre policing said if it
opened he would look at the law and act accordingly.

He said: "If something like that were to open in Leicester we would take an
interest, look at the legislation and deal with it."

In April, 60 police officers raided an Amsterdam-style coffeeshop in
Dorset. Seven people were arrested for drug-related offences and a quantity
of substance believed to be cannabis was recovered.

Don Barnard, spokesman for the Legalise Cannabis Alliance, said: "The
coffee shop will make Leicester safer. Instead of over-18s drinking and
smoking cannabis on street corners, causing vandalism and trouble, they
will be able to go to a safe and controlled environment."

A Home Office spokeswoman said enforcement of the law was an operational
matter for the police, but added that allowing drugs to be smoked on the
premises of a "cannabis cafe" was illegal.

The plans come in the wake of a government-commissioned report, by the
Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs, which recommends that cannabis
should be downgraded to a Class C drug.

If ministers accept the advice users could be free to smoke it in public
without fear of arrest.

 

 

 

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