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Testi originali ottobre 2001
Pubdate: Wed, 24 Oct 2001
Source: Guardian, The (UK)
Copyright: 2001 Guardian Newspapers Limited
Contact: letters@guardian.co.uk
Website: http://www.guardian.co.uk/guardian/
Author: Alan Travis, home affairs editor
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm
(Cannabis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm
(Decrim/Legalization)
GOVERNMENT TAKES RELAXED VIEW OF CANNABIS
Laws On Pot Seen As 'More Harmful Than The Plant Itself'
The home secretary's announcement that he intends downgrading
cannabis from
a class B to a class C illicit drug finally marks official recognition
that
the drug is widely seen as no more harmful than tobacco or alcohol.
Thirty years after the punitive 1971 Misuse of Drugs Act set
down a maximum
five year prison sentence and an unlimited fine for possession
of cannabis,
about 49% of English teenagers say they have tried the drug -
a level far
higher than in any other western European country.
As Tony Blair's "tune in, drop out" 1960s generation
has moved into the
corridors of power, so the political rhetoric about drugs has
grown more
liberal, culminating in last year's Police Foundation drugs inquiry
that
found the law on cannabis creating more harm than the drug itself.
But while the politicians have sounded increasingly liberal,
in practice
the police have been arresting more and more people for possession
of the
drug. The number of those dealt with by the police for drugs offences
involving cannabis doubled from 40,194 in 1990 to 86,034 in 1997,
after
Michael Howard announced he was tripling the maximum fines.
Since Labour came to power the numbers arrested for possession
have stayed
near the same level, with more than 81,000 a year arrested for
possession
in the 12 months to March 2001. More than 300,000 people are searched
in
the street each year by police looking for drugs.
With regard to long term drugs policy, the decision by David
Blunkett, the
home secretary, to provide official encouragement for the first
time in 20
years to doctors to prescribe heroin, could prove equally important.
The
idea is that if the most hardcore heroin addicts have access to
heroin
legally, they will not go to dealers. Prescriptions from doctors
could
bring many heroin addicts into touch with the treatment system,
where they
could progress to methadone.
There are now more than 200,000 heroin users in Britain, compared
with
little more than 1,000 registered users in the 1970s.
The Blunkett package is in sharp contrast to that of his predecessor:
Jack
Straw dismissed last year's report of the Police Foundation inquiry.
It
recommended downgrading cannabis from class B to class C, abolishing
jail
for cannabis possession, and treating small personal supplies
of cannabis
plants as simple possession.
After the report's publication, the Metropolitan police announced
their
six-month experiment in Brixton, south London, whereby those found
carrying
cannabis were no longer to be charged, allowing officers to concentrate
on
the more dangerous drugs and the gun related violence.
In July, a Guardian/ICM poll found that 65% of the public agreed
that
prosecution for cannabis should be the lowest priority for the
police. The
former Tory cabinet minister, Peter Lilley, published a pamphlet
saying the
drugs laws were "indefensible" and calling for cannabis
to be sold through
licensed outlets.
The National Association of Probation Officers last week extended
its long
term support for the decriminalisation of cannabis to all class
A drugs,
arguing that it was now more important to eliminate the lucrative
criminal
market in illicit drugs. There have even been attempts to start
up Dutch
style cafes selling cannabis over the counter.
The official medical view of cannabis has also undergone a revolution.
Although no one believes cannabis is a harmless drug, as the Runciman
inquiry confirmed, it is now widely seen to be less dangerous
than alcohol
or tobacco. Its supporters argue that its mildly sedative effect
can lead
to relaxation, decreased blood pressure, increased appetite, and
increased
sociability. Critics say the drug may impair short term memory
and affect
body coordination. There are no records of a case involving a
fatal
overdose of cannabis.
As the British Medical Association puts it: "The acute toxicity
of
cannabinoids is extremely low no deaths have been directly attributed
to
their recreational or therapeutic use." A recent Lancet article
judged
cannabis less of a threat than alcohol or tobacco, although it
said long
term use could cause lung cancer.
Official trials into the medicinal properties of cannabis have
yet to be
concluded. Medical opinion no longer regards cannabis as a "gateway
drug"
and a majority of users do not go on to take heroin.
With cannabis as a class C drug, users would face the same kind
of
penalties as those illegally supplying prescription drugs. The
maximum
penalty for possession of a class C drug is two years; for dealing
it is
five years.
In practice, reclassification is likely to mean that prosecution
for
possession of cannabis will become the exception rather than the
rule.
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