Pubdate: Mon, 17 Sep 2007
Source: Daily Telegraph (UK)
Copyright: 2007 Telegraph Group Limited
Contact:  http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/114
Author: Ben Farmer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?207 (Cannabis - United Kingdom)

YOUTH COURTS APPEAL FOR CANNABIS RETHINK

Judges and magistrates are so worried about the dangers of burgeoning
cannabis use among young criminals that nearly every youth court in
the country has urged the Government to reclassify it.

Fifty out of the 51 youth courts in England and Wales have written to
Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary, asking her to tighten the laws
regarding the drug.

Cannabis had been downgraded to a class C drug in 2004 by the then
home secretary, David Blunkett, meaning dealing the drug or possessing
it carried less severe penalties.

However, since then youth offending teams (YOTs) claim they have seen
cannabis use soar among young offenders.

In a national survey, two thirds of the teams are reported to have
found that use of the drug has risen by between a quarter and three
quarters. In some areas nine out of 10 young offenders were reported
to be using cannabis.

Meanwhile, research by Kings College in Sheffield found that 25 per
cent of young offenders in the city had turned to crime to fund their
habit.

Across the country, YOTs deal with around 10,000 under-17s a year who
come before the courts.

Darren Johnson, the secretary of the Association of YOT Managers, said
cannabis use was "out of control" in some areas.

John House, the chief superintendent of South Yorkshire Police, who
commissioned the Kings College research, said: "The reclassification
of cannabis was a decision taken based on a different drug.

"It wasn't taken bearing in mind the strength of new cannabis, or the
potential damage to social fabric caused by open cannabis smoking in
the street by those who don't perceive it as a serious crime."

Cannabis is the most popular drug in Britain, with 11 per cent of
those aged 16 to 59 claiming to have used it in the past year.

Up to one in five young people now reports smoking it at least once a
week.

The Government signalled a review of the classification earlier this
year amid concerns over the long-term effects of the drug and the rise
of far more potent strains.

The review may see cannabis reclassified as a class B
drug.

In July a study published in The Lancet medical journal appeared to
show that smoking cannabis increased the risk of developing a
psychotic illness, such as schizophrenia, later in life, with the most
frequent users more than twice as likely to become psychotic.

A Home Office spokesman said: "We have always said that cannabis is an
illegal and harmful drug. The fact remains that the steady fall in
cannabis use has been sustained through reclassification in 2004
across all age ranges.

"The recently published Information Centre survey confirms that
cannabis use for young people aged 11-15 has fallen. We are currently
reviewing the classification of cannabis and are consulting both the
public and the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs."

. The number of people seeking help for cocaine addiction has risen
400 per cent in the past five years, according to the help group
Cocaine Anonymous.

Meanwhile, the charity DrugScope found dealers were now offering an
adulterated "economy version" of the drug at around UKP30 a gram,
putting it in reach of young people and those on low incomes.
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake