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UK: Mersey conference on use of cannabis

Chris Brown

Daily Post, Liverpool

Monday 23 Feb 2004

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LIVERPOOL will host a major conference on cannabis tomorrow.

It comes just days after Tony Blair said school heads are to be given new
powers to order pupils to undergo random drugs tests.

The Prime Minister said head teachers would be issued with new guidance on
how to deal with pupils they suspect are taking drugs including provisions
for spot testing pupils.

The conference at the Crowne Plaza Hotel in the city centre will welcome
experts in the field to give insight into the drug debate.

On January 29 this year, cannabis was reclassified from a Class B to a
Class C drug.

That move has fuelled renewed interest in the topic and the conference
brings together experts to provide information about key aspects of that
debate.

It has been organised by the Liverpool-based health advice service HIT
along with Liverpool John Moores University's Centre of Public Health.

Andrew Bennett, director of HIT, is giving one of the speeches at the
conference.

He said: "We have got a wide selection of different speakers, including the
Chief Constable of Norfolk who is speaking about the policing of the drug.

"Cannabis is the most well used drug in Britain today so we need to be able
to be informed about the dangers and also ideas on how to manage the drug."
Among the people making speeches at the conference is Oxford Professor Les
Iverson who is speaking about the drug's safety record.

The medical director of GW Pharmaceuticals, Dr Philip Robson, will speak on
the possible therapeutic effects of the drug.

A Know Cannabis information campaign on Merseyside and Cheshire will
feature messages on billboards, buses, radio adverts and booklets aimed at
young people.

It gives the message that the drug is still illegal with possession
carrying a maximum sentence of two years, reduced from five.

The maximum penalty for supplying cannabis is still 14 years in prison.
Under the new law, which marked the biggest change in drug legislation in
30 years, cannabis possession will be illegal but will "ordinarily not be
an arrestable offence".

But people can be prosecuted for possessing the drug in aggravating
circumstances, such as smoking it in public.

HIT is an agency designed to give advice and guidance on drugs, community
safety and health concerns.

Established in 1985 to reduce drug-related harm, it produces literature and
a reference library for individuals and community groups.


 

 

 

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