CANNABIS MOVE IS WELCOME BY MS SUFFERERS

From: www.ccguide.org.uk

Source: York Evening Press, UK

Pub Date: Thursday, 11 July 2002

URL: http://www.thisisyork.co.uk/york/archive/2002/07/11/york_news_local18ZM.html

Subj: UK: Cannabis move is welcomed by MS sufferers

Cited: Carl Wagner: Legalise Cannabis Alliance,

CANNABIS MOVE IS WELCOME BY MS SUFFERERS

MOVES to "downgrade" cannabis have been welcomed by York MS sufferers, but attacked for "fudging the issue" by a legalisation campaigner.

Home Secretary David Blunkett announced that cannabis will from next year be a class C rather than a class B drug, meaning possession of small amounts will no longer be an arrestable offence.

The move has been welcomed by the York branch of the Multiple Sclerosis Society, which said it opened the door for sufferers who want to use the drug to alleviate their symptoms without fear of prosecution.

The society is awaiting the results of two national clinical trials to see if drugs based on derivatives of cannabis are both effective and safe in the treatment of this long-term condition.

A spokesman for the York branch said: "At the moment some people are using cannabis and a lot have found it helpful. A lot of people have also found that it does not help them.

"We don't think it's right that people should get a criminal record for using something which may be the only thing that helps their symptoms. And these changes mean that people won't be arrested.

"There may be people who have not used cannabis in the past who may now use it without fear of prosecution.

"But the society's principal concern with any potential treatment is that it is both effective and safe in the long term."

Campaigner Carl Wagner, who is looking at the possibility of opening a cannabis café in York, said Mr Blunkett had fudged the issue, adding the reclassification of cannabis was "a progression in attitudes" but did not go far enough.

Mr Wagner, who runs a market stall in Hull, said the problems of people being exposed to hard drugs when buying cannabis had not been dealt with.

And he said the decision to increase the penalty for dealing class C drugs from five to 14 years shows he "hasn't thought out the policy at all" because the current 14-year maximum for dealing class B drugs had deterred nobody.

He said: "The only way to reduce harm from bad cannabis and hard drugs is to bring cannabis within the law, allow quality controls and taxation of profits of suppliers, and to allow people to grow a few plants in their own homes."

A spokesman for the National Association of Headteachers said the downgrading should not make "a blind bit of difference" to school drugs policies.

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