Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


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

UK: More cannabis cafes to open

BBC News Online

Friday 31 May 2002

---

A Dutch-style cannabis cafe is to open in Leicester with plans for
another 13 nationwide.

Customers will be allowed to openly smoke the drug, but police have
stressed they do not endorse the cafe and will work to bring anyone
involved in the misuse of drugs before the courts.

Chris Peabody, 31, is behind the plans for the members only club whose
location is being kept secret.

No drugs or alcohol will be sold at the cafe - due to open in July - but
Mr Peabody has said he will let cannabis users take the drug onto the
premises.

He said: "People can come in and drink tea and coffee and play Scrabble.

"If they choose to smoke it is up to them.

"I am a private person who really does believe that what I am doing is
right.

Police raids

"If everybody stood quietly and just accepted all the rules women would
not be allowed to vote today."

Mr Peabody claims to have started taking cannabis at the age of 17
following an injury at work, and it stopped the pain.

He said: "I am extremely anti-drugs which is why I believe cannabis
should be legalised.

"No-one has ever died from a cannabis overdose and the only way it could
lead to harder drugs is if you buy it on the streets from dealers who
sell other stuff.

"If you could buy it in a shop that would immediately break the chain."

The pressure group the Legalise Cannabis Alliance is supporting the
plans, which will see the third cafe open in less than a year in
Britain.

Previous ventures in Stockport and Bournemouth have been subject to
police raids and arrests, but neither has been closed down.

Drugs Act

Other coffee shops are set to follow in Edinburgh, Glasgow, Cumbria,
Liverpool, Rhyl, Anglesey, Milton Keynes, Braintree, Brighton, Taunton,
Worthing, and Lambeth and Hoxton in London.

A spokeswoman for Leicestershire Police said: "Leicestershire
Constabulary enforces the law as it stands, it does not make the law.

" We would remind anyone thinking of setting up such a venue that they
may be committing offences under the Misuse of Drugs Act."

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


 

 

 

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!