Pubdate: Fri, 12 Jul 2002
Source: Christian Science Monitor (US)
Copyright: 2002 The Christian Science Publishing Society
Contact:  http://www.csmonitor.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/83
Author: Jenny MacKenzie, Special to The Christian Science Monitor

TOUGH-ON-DRUGS BRITAIN SOFTENS ITS LINE ON MARIJUANA

The Decision Wednesday To Ease Penalties For Marijuana Use Stirs Debate On 
Whether Britain Will Legalize Drugs.

LONDON - For Lauren Ringwood, Britain's debate over drug laws hits close to 
home.

At her local bus stop in Brixton, a neighborhood where police have 
experimented for a year with relaxed enforcement of marijuana laws, the 
dealers are growing more brazen - peddling bags of "skunk" to commuters 
during the day.

"It's frightening," she says. You never know if they have a knife or a gun."

On Wednesday Britain said that - though marijuana is still technically 
illegal - it would soften enforcement nationwide so that private use of 
marijuana in small amounts will no longer be subject to arrest.

The announcement by Home Secretary David Blunkett in the House of Commons 
is sparking a media furor here, with some newspapers accusing the 
government of "gambling with our children." Opposed by Conservatives and 
some Labour members of Parliament, the decision has some critics charging 
that Britain is moving toward decriminalization of drugs.

But supporters say the change will allow police to focus on more serious 
drug crimes. Within the European Union, Britain has the most drug-related 
deaths, with heroin the most frequent cause.

In announcing the change, which puts marijuana in the same category as 
antidepressants and steroids, Mr. Blunkett said that the sentence for 
marijuana dealing would be increased to a 14-year maximum.

The plan also includes increased funding for treatment of abusers - to $283 
million over the next three years - and for antidrug education programs.

Regional Trend

Several European countries have recently eased drug laws. Marijuana is 
legal in the Netherlands, and Spain and Italy do not jail users of small 
amounts of drugs intended for personal consumption. Portugal has gone the 
furthest toward decriminalization of drug use, ordering treatment rather 
than jail time in cases of possession of small amounts of any illegal drug.

Though it will be July 2003 before Britain's decision becomes law, the 
Metropolitan Police said its officers would adopt the policy from October 
this year, with other forces likely to follow. Police can now let users off 
with a warning and confiscate the drug, but they retain the right to arrest 
those who endanger public order with "aggravated behavior."

Until the much-heralded "Softly, Softly" experiment in Brixton, Britain had 
taken a tougher approach to cannabis possession than had any other European 
country, endorsing a five-year jail sentence for possession.

According to a study by the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug 
Abuse, Britain has one of the highest rates of cannabis use in Europe.

"Our research nationwide showed that over 50 percent of young people in 
Britain had taken cannabis, but that very few had gone on to hard drugs," 
says Sir Michael Rawlins, the chairman of the medical think tank that 
advises the Home Office on drug issues.

"We felt that the five-year penalty in place was quite out of proportion to 
the act.

"But we are not saying that cannabis is harmless," he adds. "I have always 
said that anyone who takes cannabis is a fool. It is unquestionably 
harmful, it affects concentration, decisionmaking, and it can aggravate 
health problems like heart conditions. However, it has been inappropriately 
positioned beside such drugs as amphetamines, which are much more 
dangerous. This decision announced [Wednesday] is a very sensible move."

A Drug Czar's Protest

Keith Hellawell, a former chief constable who has worked as a drug strategy 
adviser to Prime Minister Tony Blair, criticized the government's decision. 
"Reclassifying cannabis ... gives a mixed message to the public and to 
young people. We will now see an increased use of cannabis." Hellawell, who 
was dubbed Britain's "drugs czar" by the media, last month resigned from 
his post as Britain's ambassador on drugs strategy to the EU in protest at 
Britain's softening line on drug policy.

During a heated debate in the House of Commons, Labour MP for Vauxhall Kate 
Hoey, whose constituency includes Brixton, warned that Britain would one 
day come to regret its decision.

A local doctor at a clinic serving families in the Brixton area, who did 
not want to be named because of the sensitivity of the work, warned of 
marijuana's increasing toxicity.

"The cannabis of today ... has 10 times the strength of the cannabis on the 
market in the '80s.... The use of cannabis, holding it in the mouth, 
inhaling it deeply, greatly increases the risk of mouth, throat, and lung 
cancer. It is absolutely vital that we hold public education debates to 
bring this information to the public."

But the group of neighborhood residents who worked with police in 
introducing and monitoring the Brixton experiment welcomed the government's 
decision.

"It will allow more police attention to the real problems of hard drugs in 
our community," spokesman Paul Andell says. "It will keep youngsters out of 
the criminal-justice system, and relieve some of the community tensions we 
experience here."

Andell says it was the previous policy of "stop and search" which led to 
violent riots in the area in 1981: "Black youths increasingly resented what 
they saw as victimization."

He added that a poll conducted last year, surveying 2,000 area residents, 
showed that 81 percent thought "formal warnings" about cannabis use were 
more appropriate than arrest."

All this is cold comfort for Lauren Ringwood and her mother Ann, who see 
the decision as compounding their community's drug troubles.

"Neither I, or my daughter would dream of going out alone at night," says Ann.

"The problem is definitely getting worse. There were five of us walking 
down Coldharbour Lane a few days ago [a well-known busy Brixton street, but 
notorious as a haven for dealers] and we were approached half-a-dozen times."
- ---
MAP posted-by: Beth