Pubdate: Wed, 29 Mar 2000 Source: Daily Telegraph (UK) Copyright: 2000 Telegraph Group Limited Contact: (Sunday Telegraph: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Author: Philip Johnston CALL TO OVERHAUL DRUG LAWS IS REJECTED RADICAL reforms of the drugs laws were ruled out by the Government last night hours after an independent inquiry recommended scrapping jail terms for possessing ecstasy, LSD and cannabis. Keith Hellawell, who was appointed the drugs "tsar"in 1997, said the proposals from the Police Foundation - which spent more than two years assessing the effectiveness of Britain's 30-year-old anti-drugs law - would make it more difficult to prevent abuse. The report was criticised by anti-drug campaigners and the parents of Leah Betts, the teenager who died after taking ecstasy. But others said it was a "breath of fresh air". The inquiry, chaired by Viscountess Runciman, a former member of the Government's advisory council on the misuse of drugs, said cannabis should be downgraded from a class B to a class C drug and possession should be punishable only by cautions or fixed fines. Ecstasy and LSD would be reclassified from A to B and penalties for possession cut from five years in jail to a maximum UKP1,000 fine. Prison terms for those caught using class A drugs, including heroin and cocaine, should be cut from seven years to one, and imposed only if treatment and community-based programmes had failed. However, there would be tougher penalties for traffickers, including a greater use of powers to confiscate the assets of convicted dealers. But while ministers agreed to look at the report "carefully", the Government's reaction was lukewarm. Mr Hellawell said: "There will be no change in the categorisation of cannabis and ecstasy. We see no justification for it. It would not improve the situation, it would make it worse." He viewed the proposed "depenalisation" of cannabis as a short step from decriminalising the drug. He said: "Some people think if we legalise cannabis then things will get better. That is a vain hope. However you twist and turn it, the attraction to drugs is there and that is what we are dealing with Very few people go to jail for cannabis. But if people continue to flout the law, prison must be the final sanction." The Police Foundation, a research organisation whose president is the Prince of Wales, set up the inquiry in 1997 with the help of the Prince's Trust. Panel members included lawyers, drug treatment specialists and two senior police officers, John Hamilton, chief constable of Fife, and Denis O'Connor, assistant commissioner of the Metropolitan Police. Mr O'Connor, the newly appointed Surrey chief constable, expressed reservation over the proposals on cannabis. He said making possession a non-arrestable offence would create practical but not "insurmountable" problems for police. The committee made more than 80 recommendations. It acknowledged that the eradication of drug use was not achievable and was not a sensible goal of public policy. It also ruled out the legalisation of proscribed drugs. But its report said there was scope for an overhaul of the 1971 Misuse of Drugs Act to reflect the increasing social acceptability and relative harmlessness of drugs such as cannabis. The committee said tobacco and alcohol caused greater harm than cannabis. If they were beginning a classification of controlled drugs anew, alcohol would be a class A substance, tobacco class B and cannabis class C. Lady Runciman hoped the report would generate a vigorous public debate and produce a law "which is far more credible, more effective and more robustly enforceable than the one we have at present". She said: "There is no question of our recommending legalisation of any of these drugs. We are only suggesting changes to classifications and penalties. But there is a real danger in suggesting to young people that all drugs are equally harmful when they know from their own experience this isn't true." Janet Betts, whose daughter Leah died after taking ecstasy at her 18th birthday party, said: "I hope to God that the Government does not implement these recommendations. If they do it will be the last nail in the coffin. We will lose it with the drug dealers and the children." Those who favour legalisation felt the report had not gone far enough. Danny Kushlick, of the pressure group Transform, said the committee had ducked the issue of supply and the criminality surrounding it. He said: "Drugs need to be legalised because they're dangerous, not because they're safe. The way to control and regulate drugs is by bringing them back into the economy and not pushing them underground." However, Roger Howard, chief executive of the Institute for the Study of Drug Dependence, called the report a "breath of fresh air". He said: "For too long the drugs agenda in the UK has focused too heavily on the criminal aspects of drug use with the health consequences coming a poor second." Simon Highes, Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman, said the Government was wrong to dismiss the suggestions so quickly. He said: "Knee-jerk defence of the present law is an unacceptable response. Only stupid governments say that the law on drugs cannot be improved." But Ann Winterton, Conservative spokesman, said: "The Government must not bow to pressure to liberalise the present laws on illegal drugs. To do so would send a message to our young people that drug use is safe and acceptable." Viscountess Runciman, asked whether there should be a Royal Commission on drugs, said the inquiry was a Royal Commission in all but name. Certainly the membership was a familiar mix drawn from academia, the police, the legal profession and the media. Furthermore, their report reads like that of a Royal Commission, recommending major changes in the law and dealing with issues on which there are big differences of opinion. But the similarities do not end there. In the tradition of Royal Commissions, the report of the Police Foundation inquiry will be placed on a Whitehall shelf to gather dust. The report caused the usual broohaha that accompanies any debate on drugs. Yet it ducked the biggest question of all: would the appalling levels of crime that surround the supply of drugs be eradicated if they were legal? Given the reaction of both the Government and Conservative spokesmen to the Runciman committee's more modest proposals, that subject is clearly off-limits for many years to come. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst