Cannabis News DrugSense
  Mowlam Says Legalisation of Cannabis Could Help
Posted by FoM on July 02, 2001 at 07:33:05 PT
By Alan Travis, Home Affairs Editor 
Source: Guardian Unlimited 

cannabis Mo Mowlam, the former Labour cabinet minister responsible for drugs policy, called yesterday for the legalisation of cannabis, saying her experience in government had taught her that decriminalisation did not go far enough.

She argued that the cannabis trade should be legalised so it can be regulated with government-tested products which would be taxed - as are alcohol and tobacco - to raise funds for the national health service and to treat addicts of all types of drugs.

Her backing for a radical change in government drugs policy coincides with the start today of a six-month Metropolitan police experiment in Lambeth, south London, under which those caught in possession of cannabis will not be arrested or charged with a criminal offence.

The home secretary, David Blunkett, has already welcomed this initiative as "an interesting experiment" but any softer line towards cannabis is expected to be blocked by Tony Blair.

A Home Office spokesman stressed that Ms Mowlam was stating a personal view.

Since the election, government coordination of drugs policy across Whitehall has moved from Ms Mowlam's old job at the Cabinet Office to the home secretary, whose first act was to sideline Keith Hellawell, the drugs tsar. Ms Mowlam is believed to have been angered that his well respected deputy, Mike Trace, who has a long record in the field of drug treatment, was dealt with in a similar manner.

Ms Mowlam, who left the cabinet at the election, said that her experience in charge of drugs policy had convinced her it was time to decriminalise cannabis. Holland, Spain, Italy, Portugal and most recently Switzerland had all taken such a relaxed approach.

"In practice in this country, if you live in an area where the police do not enforce the laws for small amounts and your parents adopt the view that it's better to know what you're doing than not, you are less likely to get into trouble," said Ms Mowlam, in a column in the Sunday Mirror.

"What we need is an inquiry or commission to look at the best way to implement decriminalisation. I would also take one further step. It strikes me as totally irrational to decriminalise cannabis without looking at the sale of it. It would be an absurdity to have criminals controlling the market of a substance people can use legally."

New customs and excise figures are expected to show that cannabis seizures have fallen in the last few years from 80 tonnes in 1997/98 to 42 tonnes in 2000/01. This has been accompanied by a sharp fall in price, with Moroccan resin selling for less than £400 for a quarter of a kilo, compared with £636 in 1997. The price of a joint is now a little over £1.

Complete Title: Mowlam Says Legalisation of Cannabis Could Help NHS

Source: Guardian Unlimited, The (UK)
Author: Alan Travis, Home Affairs Editor
Published: Monday, July 2, 2001
Copyright: 2001 Guardian Newspapers Limited
Contact: letters@guardian.co.uk
Website: http://www.guardian.co.uk/

Related Articles:

Mowlam Calls for Cannabis To Be Legalised
http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread10198.shtml

UK Flooded by Cut-Price Cannabis
http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread10195.shtml

Cannabis Use Does Not Lead To Heroin
http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread10193.shtml

CannabisNews Articles - UK
http://cannabisnews.com/thcgi/search.pl?K=UK


Home    Comment    Email    Register    Recent Comments    Help

 
Comment #1 posted by Sudaca on July 02, 2001 at 08:53:55 PT
she's got it
" It would be an absurdity to have criminals controlling the market of a substance people can use legally."

It would be nice if for a change government would not interfere in the commerce of things.
However, having sales and production happen in the black market would only continue to provide inflated profits (due to the risks involved in the process)
which would still mean that the trade would be a target for unscrupulous organizations which could take over by force.

"decrim" doesn't do much. Its gray and it leaves a lot of protection for the bigots who'd like to run the hippies and rastas out of town, close the headshops and keep the pretense that society;s theirs alone to contorl.



[ Post Comment ]


  Post Comment
Name:        Password:
E-Mail:

Subject:

Comment:   [Please refrain from using profanity in your message]

Link URL:
Link Title:


Return to Main Menu


So everyone may enjoy this service and to keep it running, here are some guidelines: NO spamming, NO commercial advertising, NO flamming, NO illegal activity, and NO sexually explicit materials. Lastly, we reserve the right to remove any message for any reason!

This web page and related elements are for informative purposes only and thus the use of any of this information is at your risk! We do not own nor are responsible for visitor comments. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107 and The Berne Convention on Literary and Artistic Works, Article 10, news clippings on this site are made available without profit for research and educational purposes. Any trademarks, trade names, service marks, or service names used on this site are the property of their respective owners. Page updated on July 02, 2001 at 07:33:05