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UK: Police urge return to tough line on cannabis

Gaby Hinsliff

The Observer

Sunday 27 Jun 2004

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Police are demanding a U-turn over the softening of the law on cannabis,
claiming it has brought a 'sense of lawlessness' to the streets as smokers
flaunt their habit.

Officers say more people are openly taking and selling cannabis in public,
with calculated attempts to provoke retaliation, according to the chair of
the Police Federation.

Jan Berry said her members were 'walking on eggshells' amid tensions over
whether they treated different groups in their communities differently for
smoking in the streets.

Six months after the government downgraded cannabis to a Class C drug,
there was still widespread confusion about how to treat blatant smokers who
went beyond 'acceptable behaviour' in public, she said.

'If a person insists on doing something to get themselves arrested, you can
use your skills to try and calm them,' said Berry, whose organisation
represents frontline officers. But 'there will be other people watching how
you react, if you react in one way to a group of people and not the same to
somebody else. It's very often walking on eggshells.'

The legal change, which means that people can still be arrested for
possessing cannabis but are unlikely to be, had left officers confused,
Berry said.

Many would not, for example, arrest someone for blowing dope smoke in their
faces, but they were torn: 'The government's saying, "It is not really
serious, we don't want you to prioritise it." But it is an arrestable
offence, and now we get people saying, "Go on, arrest me".'

The Home Office insists the change allows the police to concentrate on more
serious offences involving hard drugs and that there is no evidence of
higher cannabis consumption. New figures expected to show significant
successes in tackling the smuggling of heroin, cocaine and other Class A
drugs will be used to justify the policy.

Caroline Flint, the Home Office minister responsible for drugs policy, is
monitoring national arrest patterns across the country to see how different
forces react.

Danny Kushlick, of the drugs charity Transform, said the reform had made
little practical difference: many officers had, in effect, ignored personal
use of cannabis before the law changed.

But some forces were still 'being quite heavy' on cannabis offences, while
others were letting smokers off without even a caution.

Kushlick said it was 'a hard thing' for officers to operate. 'You
effectively have a law that cannot be enforced.' The solution was the
complete legalisation of cannabis.

The federation's Berry called for a public debate over the law on soft
drugs. 'I think it would be wrong to change the law every six months
because it hasn't worked,' she said. 'But I am convinced it is not law
enforcement which will make a real different in drugs. It's about properly
raising awareness and treatment programmes.'

She is concerned about growing evidence of a link between cannabis smoking
and psychotic illness. Labour backbenchers want the government to
commission more independent research into the potential health risks.

Although a European Union-wide study found that potency of the drug had
changed little between 1979 and 2001, recent British research suggests some
versions are now two to three times stronger than average.

John Mann, Labour MP for Bassetlaw, who supported reclassification and
believed it was 'highly ignorant' to suggest the change had encouraged dope
smoking, also said more action was needed on the health risks.

'There is a difference between drinking a bottle of beer and a bottle of
whisky, yet people wouldn't immediately recognise the difference with
cannabis,' he said.

Mann wants Britain to follow the example of Queensland in Australia, where
dope smokers are cautioned, but sent to a health counsellor to discuss
their habit.

Home Office aides retorted yesterday that the Police Federation had always
been opposed the reform, and officers could arrest smokers who behaved
provocatively.

'This wasn't done at the behest of rank-and-file officers, it was done at
the behest of leader of the police services who wanted the operational
freedom to spend more of their time tackling Class A drugs,' said a source
close to David Blunkett, the Home Secretary.

'And part of the agreement we reached with police was explicitly to give
them the power to still arrest people who were effectively winding them
up,' the source said.

Evidence on the psychiatric effect of cannabis had already been considered,
and ministers had never denied it carried health risks. 'It remains harmful
to the user.'

A spokesman for the Association of Chief Police Officers, said it was 'too
early' to judge how the law was working. It had issued guidelines on when
arrests should be made.

 

 

 

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