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UK: Spliff personality

Matthew Tempest

The Guardian

Wednesday 10 Jul 2002

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There are two conflicting theories as to why Keith Hellawell, the former
drugs tsar who finally left the government in pique today, was ever
appointed - but both portray the former West Yorkshire chief constable as a
stooge.

Conspiracy theory number one is that Mr Hellawell, who had made liberal
noises about cannabis and legalising brothels as a senior police officer,
was brought into the drugs tsar role to soften up the ground for a rethink
on drugs, and cannabis in particular. He was basically acting as a
"lightning conductor" for any flack from the Daily Mail, et al.

If this was the plan, the government could legitimately sue for its money
back under the Trades Description Act, as once in situ the formerly liberal
Mr Hellawell has proved as unbending - and to his critics, unthinking -
opponent of drugs reform as any Conservative home secretary.

The other theory is that Tony Blair didn't see drug reform as a major
political issue in 1997 (even the Lib Dems weren't calling for the
decriminalisation of cannabis) and simply stole the idea of a drugs tsar
from his friend the US president Bill Clinton and appointed Mr Hellawell as
a "safe pair of hands".

Well, that didn't work either, as Mr Hellawell was ridiculed first for his
salary (at £105,000 it was more than the prime minister's at the time), and
then sidelined for his increasingly hysterical opposition to any debate on
cannabis, clinging on to the notion that it was a gateway to harder drugs
even as the political, policing and medical consensus shifted under his feet.

His "credibility with the kids" was lost immediately, after Mr Hellawell
joined the tabloid frenzy on Noel Gallagher, after the Oasis frontman
compared having a joint with having a cup of tea.

The publication of his 10-year strategy on drugs was also ridiculed, and he
was forced to revise it in subsequent years as targets were missed and the
UK's drug consumption steadily rose.

He dismissed out of hand the police foundation's landmark report on drug
policy in 2000, which first recommended both the dowgrading of cannabis and
ecstacy, and the permitted medicinal use of cannabis.

Instead, Mr Hellawell retreated further into the "war on drugs" rhetoric,
undermined again when Mo Mowlam, shunted out of her Northern Ireland job
and into the government's anti-drugs coordinator at the Cabinet Office,
admitted smoking cannabis as a student.

The rhetoric became more hysterical as Mr Hellawell at one point suggested
buying the Taliban's entire Afghan opium crop and burning it.

However, it was the appointment of David Blunkett as home secretary,
replacing the more hardline Jack Straw, which signalled the death knell for
the increasingly sidelined former copper. To save Mr Hellawell's blushes,
he wasn't sacked, but downgraded from drugs tsar, to a two-day-a-week
adviser to the Home Office.

With the home affairs select committee coming out in favour of cannabis
reclassification last autumn, the writing was on the wall for the former
chief constable.

His petulant resignation this morning suggests he may be taking the Chris
Woodhead career path - a former hardline appointee, brought in to give the
government supporting cover under fire from Middle England, who then jumps
ship for a lucrative media career with the rightwing press. A Hellawell
column with the Mail or the Telegraph looks increasingly likely.

His bizarre parting shot today - that the government was "moving further
towards decriminalisation than any other country in the world", despite the
situation in the Netherlands, Belgium, Portugal, Italy, Spain and
Switzerland, shows how out of step with both the government, public opinion
and the international situation Mr Hellawell had become.

 

 

 

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