Pubdate: Sun, 08 Jul 2001 Source: Sunday Times (UK) Copyright: 2001 Times Newspapers Ltd. Contact: http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/439 Section: COMMENT Author: Melanie Phillips VISIT SWEDEN, AND SEE HOW TO STOP A DRUGS DISASTER What on earth is going on? Suddenly, Britain is in the grip of a frenzied campaign to legalise cannabis and even all drugs. In Lambeth, south London, the police commander announces to great fanfare that people will no longer be arrested for cannabis possession but will be let off with a warning. Mo Mowlam, Peter Lilley and The Daily Telegraph all call for cannabis to be legalised. Sir Keith Morris, our former man in Colombia, says legalisation should apply to all drugs. Meanwhile, a much lionised television series says heroin should be legalised on the grounds that the drug is safe and it is the criminal law that kills people. Without exception these arguments are intellectually dishonest, disingenuous or terrifyingly irresponsible. Yet they are gaining critical mass. Lilley claims that the illegality of cannabis means users are more likely to be thrust into the arms of hard drug pushers because all drugs are available only through the same illegal channels. But this is not true. Many dealers sell cannabis alone; much of it is sold on from one user to another. He cites Holland's effective decriminalisation of cannabis as a roaring success. Is he mad? The Dutch experiment is a disaster. It has turned Holland into the drug baron of the West; its young people are now the biggest users in Europe of cocaine and ecstasy; use of heroin and cannabis has risen and there has been an explosion of drug-related crime. He claims the alleged health risks of cannabis are "either bogus or exaggerated". He bases this on one study in The Lancet. But that study says cannabis can cause anxiety and panic; damage to attention, memory and physical co-ordination; increased risk of psychosis; greater risk of malignant disease; and dependency caused by "inability to abstain from or control cannabis use". Just what has to be proved before Lilley concludes that harm is not "bogus or exaggerated"? How can he minimise the dangers to others and to society from the psychosis, poor educational or work performance or harm to unborn children that cannabis can cause? In his "year's research" how has he missed the thousands of studies detailing this damage? Heather Ashton, a pharmacology professor, says memory loss and cognitive deficits can persist years after stopping cannabis use; there is far greater risk of developing cancer; it can precipitate schizophrenia; it decreases the sperm count; it can produce hallucinating flashbacks and it is linked with violent crime. To say the war against cannabis has been lost because it is illegal is a sick joke. Britain is swamped by a glut of cannabis, as a result of which the price has dropped through the floor. The principal reason is an abrupt change of direction by Customs and Excise. This makes a nonsense of government hints that cannabis may now drop down the list of drug enforcement priorities. It has already happened and the results are catastrophic. According to Keith Hellawell, the (now sidelined) drugs czar, government policy between 1998 and 1999 changed at his prompting. While all drug use was still to be reduced, priority was to be given to reducing heroin and cocaine use. So performance indicators were set for heroin and cocaine seizures; none was set for class B drugs such as cannabis. The rationale, says Hellawell, was that with limited resources hard drugs should have priority. But he never intended customs officers to stop all specific operations against cannabis. Customs and Excise says it will "continue to investigate cannabis cases where this will make a material impact and to detect and prosecute cannabis smugglers". David Raynes, an assistant chief investigation officer for Customs and Excise, who retired a year ago, says these are weasel words. From early last year, he says, all targeted investigations of large-scale cannabis traffickers were stopped. Customs officers were formally discouraged from launching the operations against cannabis that were intended to stop the trade. The only cannabis seizures made were what they discovered during other investigations. Many customs and police officers, says Raynes, were appalled. The result has been a dramatic fall in cannabis seizures and a flood of the drug onto the streets. This has produced a desperately dangerous situation. For all drugs predispose users to try other drugs. That does not mean everyone will do so, but use of cannabis or ecstasy or amphetamines makes it much more likely that hard drugs will be tried. Lilley says cannabis isn't a "gateway" drug. But he failed to report the New Zealand study showing that one joint a week makes people 60 times more likely to use hard drugs; or another study showing that one in four cannabis users goes on to heroin or cocaine. Far from the "war on drugs" having failed, we've never properly had one. The Lambeth "experiment" is not new at all. It merely replicates what officers in the Met and elsewhere have been doing for years: issuing derisory warnings for cannabis use, effectively turning a blind eye. Magistrates refuse to shut down all-night clubs fuelling the drugs trade on the grounds that this would hurt their city's economy; drugs education in schools is weak or ambivalent; and a lot of influential people are saying the law is an ass. By contrast, in Sweden, where a mere 9% have tried drugs compared with our 34%, drug use is kept low through tough enforcement and prevention policies. In the 1960s Sweden decriminalised amphetamines and produced an epidemic. It has since reverted to its tough approach. It does not just enforce fines for possession and prison for large-scale possession and supply. It has criminalised drug use itself. The police test the blood and urine of suspected users, and if they come up positive they are fined. If teachers suspect that pupils have taken drugs, they call in the police and social workers. Against this background, treatment and drug education policies work because all the signals are pointing in the same direction. Of course, we have lost the war against the Colombian drug cartels. The war against supply can never be won. We have been fighting on the wrong front. The main target should be to reduce demand through Swedish-type prevention and enforcement policies - the very approach we refuse to take. But law enforcement relies on popular consent and that is precisely what the present campaign is intended to undermine. Promoted by organisations backed by billions of dollars to pump out mind-twisting propaganda, it is capturing the gullible, the opportunistic, the malign and those for whom it would be a grave social embarrassment for their drug-puffing, pill-popping children to gain a criminal record. The Conservatives may be about to abandon those who strive to be law-abiding. But it's not enough for the Labour government to resist the explicit legalisation tide. David Blunkett must grasp that the drug war is being lost through the ignorance, cowardice and demoralisation of our law enforcement agencies and governing class. He should visit Sweden, tear up this failed policy and start again. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom