Pubdate: Thu, 09 Oct 1997 Source: The Times (UK) Contact: Chief Justice urges debate on cannabis By Frances Gibb, Legal Correspondent THE most senior judge in England and Wales yesterday backed calls for a public debate on the legalisation of soft drugs such as cannabis. Just days after Jack Straw, the Home Secretary, ruled out moves to legalise cannabis, the Lord Chief Justice said the issue merited consideration. Lord Bingham of Cornhill made clear at a press conference that he was not expressing a personal view on decriminalisation of soft drugs. But he said: "It is a subject that deserves, in my judgment, detached, objective, independent consideration." He also welcomed the recent decision by the independent Police Foundation to have an inquiry into the law on the misuse of drugs. Last night a spokesman for the Home Office reiterated Mr Straw's comments that decriminalising cannabis would only encourage its use. The spokesman added, however, that the Government was happy to debate the issue. Bill Saulsbury, secretary and assistant director of the Police Foundation, said: "We are very pleased at such authorative encouragement as the Lord Chief Justice for the inquiry into whether the laws are still meeting the needs for which they were framed." Paul Cavadino, principal officer of the National Association for the Care and Resettlement of Offenders, said: "It is very helpful for the Lord Chief Justice to give his backing to an openminded look at whether we have got the balance right in the resources currently spent on enforcing the law on illegal drugs."