News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Web: Medical Advisers Back Cannabis Reform |
Title: | UK: Web: Medical Advisers Back Cannabis Reform |
Published On: | 2002-03-14 |
Source: | BBC News (UK Web) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-24 17:42:59 |
MEDICAL ADVISERS BACK CANNABIS REFORM
Cannabis is smoked by millions in the UK Cannabis should be downgraded to a
Class C drug, a government-commissioned report has recommended.
If ministers accept the advice users could be free to smoke it in public
without fear of arrest.
Medical experts at the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) said
the current classification of cannabis alongside substances like
amphetamines was "disproportionate" to its harmfulness.
A decision on the recommendations will be made after a Home Affairs select
committee report on drugs strategy and a review of a pilot project in
Lambeth, south London. Both are due by Easter.
The prime minister's official spokesman said that while Home Secretary
David Blunkett had said he was "minded" to re-classify cannabis "there are
no plans for decriminalisation or legalisation".
Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith said downgrading or decriminalising cannabis
would be an ill-thought out solution to a complex problem.
During a visit to Langdon College in Salford he said: "Anybody who knows
about the difficulties in communities, about young people who are trying
drugs and moving on to harder drugs, knows it is far more complex than that."
'Few Health Risks'
ACMD chairman Professor Sir Michael Rawlins said his report was not saying
cannabis was harmless.
"Cannabis is associated with some risks of health but the council concludes
that these are less than the risks posed by other Class B drugs such as
amphetamine," he said.
The report found the use of cannabis, which has risen sharply over the past
20 years, does not cause any major health problems and rarely causes
serious illness in previously healthy people.
However, even occasional use posed significant dangers for people with
mental health problems including schizophrenia and those with poor
circulation or heart conditions.
But both groups were still at greater risk from amphetamines.
The report said it was impossible to say if cannabis users became addicted
or whether they were likely to progress to harder drugs.
'Refreshing'
The findings were welcomed by Roger Howard, chief executive of the charity
DrugScope.
He said: "It is refreshing to have a Home Secretary who is at last willing
to open up the debate on drugs and consider moving towards a more logical
and pragmatic drugs policy."
Mr Howard rejected claims it would lead to an increase in drug use and said
he hoped the report would help end prosecution of people found with small
amounts of cannabis.
But Paul Betts, father of 18-year-old ecstasy victim Leah Betts, said the
government had reneged on its promises to be hard on drugs.
He said: "This is the start of the slippery slope. They are scared to say
it's dangerous."
The publication of the report follows last weekend's vote by the Liberal
Democrats to support the legalisation of cannabis.
Delegates also voted to end imprisonment for the possession of any illegal
drug - including heroin and cocaine - and backed the downgrading of ecstasy
from a Class A to a Class B drug.
Drugs Monitor
David Blunkett commissioned the ACMD study last October.
The ACMD monitors the state of drugs use and misuse in the UK and was set
up under the 1971 Misuse of Drugs Act.
Drugs are classified as Class A, B or C according to harm they may cause.
Cannabis is a Class B drug, the same category as other substances including
amphetamines and growth hormones.
Recent studies suggest that cannabis use has risen sharply since the early
seventies, especially among those in the 20 to 24 age group.
Cannabis is smoked by millions in the UK Cannabis should be downgraded to a
Class C drug, a government-commissioned report has recommended.
If ministers accept the advice users could be free to smoke it in public
without fear of arrest.
Medical experts at the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) said
the current classification of cannabis alongside substances like
amphetamines was "disproportionate" to its harmfulness.
A decision on the recommendations will be made after a Home Affairs select
committee report on drugs strategy and a review of a pilot project in
Lambeth, south London. Both are due by Easter.
The prime minister's official spokesman said that while Home Secretary
David Blunkett had said he was "minded" to re-classify cannabis "there are
no plans for decriminalisation or legalisation".
Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith said downgrading or decriminalising cannabis
would be an ill-thought out solution to a complex problem.
During a visit to Langdon College in Salford he said: "Anybody who knows
about the difficulties in communities, about young people who are trying
drugs and moving on to harder drugs, knows it is far more complex than that."
'Few Health Risks'
ACMD chairman Professor Sir Michael Rawlins said his report was not saying
cannabis was harmless.
"Cannabis is associated with some risks of health but the council concludes
that these are less than the risks posed by other Class B drugs such as
amphetamine," he said.
The report found the use of cannabis, which has risen sharply over the past
20 years, does not cause any major health problems and rarely causes
serious illness in previously healthy people.
However, even occasional use posed significant dangers for people with
mental health problems including schizophrenia and those with poor
circulation or heart conditions.
But both groups were still at greater risk from amphetamines.
The report said it was impossible to say if cannabis users became addicted
or whether they were likely to progress to harder drugs.
'Refreshing'
The findings were welcomed by Roger Howard, chief executive of the charity
DrugScope.
He said: "It is refreshing to have a Home Secretary who is at last willing
to open up the debate on drugs and consider moving towards a more logical
and pragmatic drugs policy."
Mr Howard rejected claims it would lead to an increase in drug use and said
he hoped the report would help end prosecution of people found with small
amounts of cannabis.
But Paul Betts, father of 18-year-old ecstasy victim Leah Betts, said the
government had reneged on its promises to be hard on drugs.
He said: "This is the start of the slippery slope. They are scared to say
it's dangerous."
The publication of the report follows last weekend's vote by the Liberal
Democrats to support the legalisation of cannabis.
Delegates also voted to end imprisonment for the possession of any illegal
drug - including heroin and cocaine - and backed the downgrading of ecstasy
from a Class A to a Class B drug.
Drugs Monitor
David Blunkett commissioned the ACMD study last October.
The ACMD monitors the state of drugs use and misuse in the UK and was set
up under the 1971 Misuse of Drugs Act.
Drugs are classified as Class A, B or C according to harm they may cause.
Cannabis is a Class B drug, the same category as other substances including
amphetamines and growth hormones.
Recent studies suggest that cannabis use has risen sharply since the early
seventies, especially among those in the 20 to 24 age group.
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