Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


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

UK: Yard Chief Calls For Drugs Trade To Be Legalised

David Bamber, Home Affairs Editor

Sunday Telegraph

Sunday 18 May 2003

---

One of Scotland Yard's most senior officers has called for hard drugs -
including crack cocaine and heroin - to be decriminalised, saying that
police cannot win the war against dealers.

Chief Supt Anthony Wills, the borough commander of Hammersmith and
Fulham in London, said that as the state could not control the criminal
trade in drugs, it should take it over instead.

"I would have no problems with decriminalising drugs full stop," said Mr
Wills. "There have to be very stringent measures over the production and
supply of drugs and we have got to remove the drug market from
criminals. I do not want people to take drugs but if they are going to,
I want them to take them safely, with a degree of purity and in a
controlled way."

Mr Wills, who heads more than 2,000 officers, said that draconian
anti-drugs measures had always failed. "There are some places where
people are beheaded if they sell drugs but even this does not stop the
trade."

The officer, who has been a policeman for 30 years and a borough
commander for six, has two teenage children and said: "I do not want my
children taking drugs: what I am absolutely frightened about is that if
my children want to take drugs I cannot stop them because there are
animals out there who are prepared to sell them anything to make a
profit."

He added: "I am not saying people should take drugs. They are very bad
for you but the reality of the world we live in is this: if people want
to get drugs they can get them. Drugs are a fact of life and you cannot
eradicate them. My only concern is to increase the safety of the
community and not to allow these ghastly people to make a fortune out of
other people's misery."

Mr Wills's call, made in an interview with the Hammersmith and
Shepherd's Bush Gazette, follows the controversy sparked by the
Metropolitan Police's "Lambeth experiment" two years ago in which police
in south London turned a blind eye to possession of cannabis.

The experiment led to allegations that hard drugs such as crack and
heroin were being sold openly on the streets of Lambeth. Cdr Brian
Paddick, the architect of the policy, was later suspended then
reinstated over allegations that he himself had taken drugs. He has
since been transferred to other duties and the experiment has been
dropped.

Mr Wills, however, said that he too did not believe police should bother
upholding laws on cannabis. "I am very liberal in relation to possession
of drugs," he said. "Policing cannabis is a waste of our time as I do
not feel the effects of cannabis are any worse than over-consumption of
alcohol."

Last night his decision to air his views caused a row. Senior
Conservatives said he would encourage young people to think that taking
drugs was supported by the police and called on him to issue a
retraction.

Ann Widdecombe, the former shadow home secretary, said: "When young
people read views like this from a senior policeman they get the
impression that taking drugs is okay - well it isn't. Hard drugs kill
people and cannabis is proven scientifically to be harmful."

Many Conservatives also argue that the Government has encouraged
confusion on the question of drugs by appearing to soften its policy.
David Blunkett, the Home Secretary, has already announced that cannabis
is to be downgraded from a Class B drug to Class C, meaning that
possessing it will no longer be an arrestable offence.

A Scotland Yard spokesman said last night that no action was planned
against Mr Wills "at this time". She added that she was not aware
whether he had told Sir John Stevens, the Commissioner, of his intention
to air his views.

The Home Office said: "All controlled drugs are harmful and will remain
illegal. The Government's drug strategy focuses on the most dangerous
drugs as the misery they cause cannot be underestimated. We have not
seen the interview and so cannot comment on it."


 

 

 

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!