News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Cannabis Campaign: HEED OUR RALLYING CRY |
Title: | UK: Cannabis Campaign: HEED OUR RALLYING CRY |
Published On: | 1998-03-08 |
Source: | Independent on Sunday |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-07 14:18:54 |
HEED OUR RALLYING CRY
IT IS TIME to stand up and be counted. For the past six months the
Independent on Sunday has led the debate on decriminalising cannabis. Now
it is time to turn words into people power. We want the thousands who have
already signed our petition to join countless others who believe the
Government's war against cannabis is harming our society, to join us in
London.
We are planning a mass march through the heart of the capital on Saturday
28 March and it should prove to be the biggest pro-cannabis demonstration
for 30 years.
Caroline Coon, the artist and original founder of the drug charity Release,
who helped organise the last "pot rally" in London in 1968, is to support
our march.
"People should never believe that demonstrations are useless. People power
on the streets does change things," said Ms Coon who continues to campaign
actively for drug law reform.
"The drug issue is more important today than it was 30 years ago because
authoritarian governments are now using the war against drugs, which is
really a war against people, to undermine democracy and civil liberties.
"Thousands of people speaking with one voice could force the Government to
change the law. We know that prohibition is the worst way to reduce any
harm drugs may do. Prohibition wastes millions of pounds in tax revenue
which could be better spent on reducing poverty."
The deputy director of Release, Greg Poulter, is equally resolute in his
support for the march. "It is necessary to show the politicians the
strength of feeling in the country for reform of the cannabis laws.
Demonstrations of this sort can send a message to the Government that they
need to respond to public opinion and not remain entrenched in the
discredited doctrine of prohibition," he said.
Supporters wishing to take part in the march should assemble in Hyde Park
for a mid-day departure for Trafalgar Square where speakers including IoS
editor Rosie Boycott, Howard Marks and Paul Flynn MP will address the rally.
Groups from as far afield as Scotland, Wales and the North-west have
already indicated that they will be attending. And a delegation from the
European parliament is also expected.
"We shall be urging all our supporters to attend, " said Alun Buffry,
spokesman for the Campaign to Legalise Cannabis International Association
(CLCIA). "The time is right to support the IoS march. We have noticed a
distinct change in attitudes since the campaign began in the newspaper. The
fact that a lot of professional people were prepared to put their name to
the petition that has been running each week seems to have encouraged a lot
of people to announce in public what they may have previously only
whispered in private."
As yet no one can guess how many campaigners will support our march, but we
are urging individuals to start organising groups and let us know how many
to expect.
A 1996 survey revealed that 8.3 million adults between the ages of 16 and
59 had admitted to using cannabis, and it only requires a fraction of that
total to make a point on the streets.
But how the point is made is almost as important as the point itself. Rosie
Boycott has urged supporters to be streetwise. "It is important that
everyone remembers that we are out to change the law, not break it," said
Ms Boycott. "It would be naive not to recognise that we will be scrutinised
by hostile eyes. We must not provoke police reaction. We want to change the
law on cannabis by legal and democratic means," she said.
Danny Kushlick, of the drug law reform group Transform, says he is
impressed by the way the IoS has taken the argument forward. "Up until now
there has been no attempt to get people on the ground involved," he said.
And the campaign is having an effect, he thinks. "I've noticed a major
shift in the last three months, with the House of Lords committee and the
Police Foundation investigation. People are coming out of the woodwork and
everything seems to be happening with a rush. It is quite astonishing."
HOW TO GET THERE
ROLL UP, roll up for the great cannabis march. On Saturday 28 March
supporters of the Independent on Sunday's decriminalise cannabis campaign
should gather at Reformer's Tree in Hyde Park for the biggest march in
support of cannabis for 30 years. (There is no tree there any more - a
lamp-post marks the spot.)
The procession will follow a police-approved route, out of the park and
into Park Lane. From here the marchers head down to Hyde Park Corner and
turn into Piccadilly. From Piccadilly Circus we will turn right into the
Haymarket and from the south end of the Haymarket turn left into Trafalgar
Square.
The Royal Parks agency insists that no stalls are erected in Hyde Park and
requests that banners be kept furled until marchers are on the road.
Collections are banned en route and the authorities request that litter in
Trafalgar Square be kept to a minimum.
Notwithstanding the limitations, the organisers are determined that the day
should be a celebration rather than a confrontation.
"In 1967 at the time of the first 'pot rally' in London the underground was
in its infancy," said Caroline Coon, who founded Release that year. "The
scene in San Francisco was far more advanced and Allen Ginsberg came over
and addressed the crowd in Trafalgar Square and was almost arrested."
Thirty years later the tables of tolerance are turned. Professor John P
Morgan of the City of New York Medical School and co-author of the book
Marijuana Myths, Marijuana Facts, said: "This is marvellous news. I cannot
conceive of a demonstration like this in America just now. I wish you
success. The eyes of the western democracies are upon you."
IT IS TIME to stand up and be counted. For the past six months the
Independent on Sunday has led the debate on decriminalising cannabis. Now
it is time to turn words into people power. We want the thousands who have
already signed our petition to join countless others who believe the
Government's war against cannabis is harming our society, to join us in
London.
We are planning a mass march through the heart of the capital on Saturday
28 March and it should prove to be the biggest pro-cannabis demonstration
for 30 years.
Caroline Coon, the artist and original founder of the drug charity Release,
who helped organise the last "pot rally" in London in 1968, is to support
our march.
"People should never believe that demonstrations are useless. People power
on the streets does change things," said Ms Coon who continues to campaign
actively for drug law reform.
"The drug issue is more important today than it was 30 years ago because
authoritarian governments are now using the war against drugs, which is
really a war against people, to undermine democracy and civil liberties.
"Thousands of people speaking with one voice could force the Government to
change the law. We know that prohibition is the worst way to reduce any
harm drugs may do. Prohibition wastes millions of pounds in tax revenue
which could be better spent on reducing poverty."
The deputy director of Release, Greg Poulter, is equally resolute in his
support for the march. "It is necessary to show the politicians the
strength of feeling in the country for reform of the cannabis laws.
Demonstrations of this sort can send a message to the Government that they
need to respond to public opinion and not remain entrenched in the
discredited doctrine of prohibition," he said.
Supporters wishing to take part in the march should assemble in Hyde Park
for a mid-day departure for Trafalgar Square where speakers including IoS
editor Rosie Boycott, Howard Marks and Paul Flynn MP will address the rally.
Groups from as far afield as Scotland, Wales and the North-west have
already indicated that they will be attending. And a delegation from the
European parliament is also expected.
"We shall be urging all our supporters to attend, " said Alun Buffry,
spokesman for the Campaign to Legalise Cannabis International Association
(CLCIA). "The time is right to support the IoS march. We have noticed a
distinct change in attitudes since the campaign began in the newspaper. The
fact that a lot of professional people were prepared to put their name to
the petition that has been running each week seems to have encouraged a lot
of people to announce in public what they may have previously only
whispered in private."
As yet no one can guess how many campaigners will support our march, but we
are urging individuals to start organising groups and let us know how many
to expect.
A 1996 survey revealed that 8.3 million adults between the ages of 16 and
59 had admitted to using cannabis, and it only requires a fraction of that
total to make a point on the streets.
But how the point is made is almost as important as the point itself. Rosie
Boycott has urged supporters to be streetwise. "It is important that
everyone remembers that we are out to change the law, not break it," said
Ms Boycott. "It would be naive not to recognise that we will be scrutinised
by hostile eyes. We must not provoke police reaction. We want to change the
law on cannabis by legal and democratic means," she said.
Danny Kushlick, of the drug law reform group Transform, says he is
impressed by the way the IoS has taken the argument forward. "Up until now
there has been no attempt to get people on the ground involved," he said.
And the campaign is having an effect, he thinks. "I've noticed a major
shift in the last three months, with the House of Lords committee and the
Police Foundation investigation. People are coming out of the woodwork and
everything seems to be happening with a rush. It is quite astonishing."
HOW TO GET THERE
ROLL UP, roll up for the great cannabis march. On Saturday 28 March
supporters of the Independent on Sunday's decriminalise cannabis campaign
should gather at Reformer's Tree in Hyde Park for the biggest march in
support of cannabis for 30 years. (There is no tree there any more - a
lamp-post marks the spot.)
The procession will follow a police-approved route, out of the park and
into Park Lane. From here the marchers head down to Hyde Park Corner and
turn into Piccadilly. From Piccadilly Circus we will turn right into the
Haymarket and from the south end of the Haymarket turn left into Trafalgar
Square.
The Royal Parks agency insists that no stalls are erected in Hyde Park and
requests that banners be kept furled until marchers are on the road.
Collections are banned en route and the authorities request that litter in
Trafalgar Square be kept to a minimum.
Notwithstanding the limitations, the organisers are determined that the day
should be a celebration rather than a confrontation.
"In 1967 at the time of the first 'pot rally' in London the underground was
in its infancy," said Caroline Coon, who founded Release that year. "The
scene in San Francisco was far more advanced and Allen Ginsberg came over
and addressed the crowd in Trafalgar Square and was almost arrested."
Thirty years later the tables of tolerance are turned. Professor John P
Morgan of the City of New York Medical School and co-author of the book
Marijuana Myths, Marijuana Facts, said: "This is marvellous news. I cannot
conceive of a demonstration like this in America just now. I wish you
success. The eyes of the western democracies are upon you."
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