Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


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

UK: No 'blind eye' to cannabis users

BBC Online

Thursday 22 Jan 2004

---
Scottish police will not turn a blind eye to cannabis use when it is
downgraded to a Class C drug, Deputy Justice Minister Hugh Henry has said.

He denied the home secretary's move to downgrade the drug from Class B sent
out a conflicting message.

A UKP1m advertising campaign will remind people that cannabis remains illegal.

Police in England will, in future, make arrests only rarely for possession
of small amounts of the drug.

Mr Henry told BBC Radio Scotland there would be no change in practice in
Scotland, despite the change next week.

While the law on drug classification is a power reserved to Westminster,
policing and law and order are devolved.

Denying that downgrading the drug implied a lighter touch by Scottish
police in future, he said: "It does not imply that at all. In Scotland the
police will operate in the same way they have been operating

"The point of reclassification is that the home secretary was given medical
and scientific advice that the effects of cannabis, compared to certain
other drugs, should be looked at differently.

"It's merely a statement of whether cannabis is as serious a drug as, for
example, heroin or cocaine. It does not imply that cannabis is a safe drug."

Mr Henry added: "It is an illegal drug and anyone caught in possession will
still be open to criminal prosecution.

"In Scotland, we will make a decision on how we apply the law and police
it. And our view remains consistent. There is no change - the police will
act in the way they have always acted, and the advice from the Crown Office
will remain as it was before."

 

 

 

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!