Pubdate: Tue, 4 Apr 2000 Source: Sun, The (UK) Contact: IT WOULD BE A CRIME TO GO SOFT ON HARD DRUGS The government is right to ignore those who want to downgrade certain drugs and slash jail terms for hardcore users. Most people think jail terms sgould be increased since those hooked on drugs do not give a damn where they get the money to feed their habit. They commit burglary and beat up old folk for a few pounds. Ask the people who have been affected by this vile trade - the parents who have lost a child. And suggesting that anyone caught with Class B drugs should only be fined pounds 1000 is beyond belief. Where do they think an addict will get the money from if not more crime? Or are taxpayers expected to foot the bill. Terry Palmer, Barnsley, Yorks Tony Blair is right to take a stand against the proposed relaxation in drugs laws. Whether they are Class A or B drugs they are dangerous. And as soon as dealers think we are going soft they will exploit youngsters even more than today. Drugs are common. What we need are stricter laws to stop the situation getting worse. Miss B Tyler, Godstone, Surrey How disgusting that a Police Foundation think-tank should advocate the legalisation of drugs. They praised Dutch cannabis cafes where the drug is freely sold and smoked. Could it be that, as the police seem incapable of catching dealers, they wish to make their job easier by ignoring the proven dangers of the drug culture? Philip Allison, Leigh, Lancs We should be advocating a zero tolerance approach to all drug offences, be it possession or supplying, not making things easier for offenders. Sheila Seymour, Doncaster, Yorks The authors of the Police Foundation report who recommended that Ecstasy should no longer be defined as a Class A drug ought to meet the families of those who have died as a result of taking it. L Evans, Walsall, West Midlands The Police Foundation report recommends cutting jail sentences for possession of hard drugs and effectively decriminilising cannabis and Ecstasy by not jailing offenders. Is this so they can reduce the crime rate without the need for police work? Burglary and car theft are also widespread, perhaps if we decriminilise these too, it won't matter that police numbers are falling. Ryan Gregory, Leicester I agree cannabis should be decriminilised but let's leave Ecstasy as a Class A drug, because its been shown to kill. Anyone caught with Ecstasy should be prosecuted. It will probably save their life. Andrew Telford, Newcastle upon Tyne We don't have enough cash to treat the casualties of legal drugs like tobacco and alcohol. How will we treat double the victims if cannabis and Ecstasy are downgraded? Nick Charles, Southall, Middx Have any of the families of the "responsible people" involved in the report on declassifying illegal drugs been touched by death, squalor, crime, AIDS or anything else connected with drugs? They should not be downgraded - the penalties should be increased. Gerry Frobisher, Meliden, Denbighshire I wonder how many people think that because they smoked a cannabis joint at university and it did them no harm, it's all right to inflict it on the rest of the country? For once Labour have done well to reject this advice. They only need to keep Clause 28, reduce the tax on petrol, reject the euro, support family values with some integrity, put more police on the street, shorten hospital waiting lists and allow teachers some authority and they might get my vote. Mike Ellis, Ipswich, Suffolk - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck