Pubdate: Thu, 11 Jul 2002 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Copyright: 2002 The Dallas Morning News Contact: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/117 Author: Gregory Katz, The Dallas Morning News Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?207 (Cannabis - United Kingdom) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) BRITAIN CUTS SOME SLACK FOR POT SMOKERS Ticket, Small Fine More Likely Than Arrest Or Jail LONDON -- In a major relaxation of drug laws, British Prime Minister Tony Blair's government announced Wednesday that marijuana laws would be eased so that people who use small quantities of the drug will not face arrest. The controversial reclassification of marijuana from a Class B to a Class C drug will take effect next July, British Home Secretary David Blunkett said. Mr. Blunkett said the new law stopped short of decriminalization of marijuana but would allow police to focus on hard drug users and dealers. "The message to young people and families must be open, honest and believable," he told Parliament. "Cannabis is a potentially harmful drug and should remain illegal. However, it is not comparable with crack, heroin and ecstasy." Mr. Blunkett, who announced last year that he intended to make this change, said marijuana should not be classified in the same way as drugs that kill. In Britain, possession of a Class B drug carries a maximum penalty of five years in jail. Possession of a Class C drug carries a maximum sentence of two years, but the Home Office said that penalty was rarely invoked for first- time offenders, who normally receive only a ticket. Instead of being arrested and possibly put in prison, marijuana users would face modest fines or other penalties, officials said. The change in emphasis puts Britain in the forefront of a European movement toward easing penalties for marijuana use. Already, there has been a reduction of penalties for marijuana in Portugal, Spain, Italy and several other countries, including the Netherlands, which has long tolerated use of marijuana and hashish. Also, a number of European governments advocate approaches that focus on "harm reduction," seen as reducing the damage to drug users' lives, instead of prosecuting them. Additionally, experts said, these countries have increased the level of resources spent on drug prevention and treatment. The British proposal to reduce penalties for marijuana has received strong support from police chiefs and police associations. Law enforcement officials have argued that it was unrealistic to expect young people to respect a legal system that permitted tobacco and alcohol use but treated marijuana as a life-threatening substance. But the policy was opposed by the government's drug czar, Keith Hellawell, who resigned early Wednesday to protest the loosening of marijuana laws. He said he believed that the tolerant approach is misguided because marijuana smoking can lead to dangerous hard-drug use. "It is a softening of the law and it's giving the wrong message," he said. After marijuana is reclassified, it will be in the same category as anti-depressants and steroids. There was also sharp criticism of the policy shift from leading members of the opposition Conservative Party, who attacked Prime Minister Tony Blair in a parliamentary confrontation. "Why should anyone have confidence now in the government's new drugs policy when your own drugs czar has resigned saying it is all wrong," Conservative Party leader Ian Duncan Smith said. He was joined by Oliver Letwin, the Conservative Party spokesman on law and order issues, who said Mr. Blunkett should have made a clear choice, either legalizing marijuana or making a serious commitment to enforcing existing laws. Instead of taking a stand, he said the government had chosen a "muddled and dangerous" course. "You need to explain how, with a policy that consists of deeply confusing mixed messages, you can conceivably expect to reduce drug dependency and criminality in this country," he said in Parliament. Mr. Blair, in response, said the policy shift would give police more leeway when dealing with marijuana smokers. He said that marijuana use would "remain a criminal offense" and that more resources could be used against drug dealers of all types, including those who specialize in marijuana. Mr. Blunkett said the proposed downgrade would be accompanied by a beefed-up anti-drug education campaign, teaching young people that all drugs can harm them and that hard drugs can kill. The policy change follows an experimental program that began last summer in the London neighborhood of Brixton that allowed police to ticket marijuana users rather than arrest them. Mr. Blunkett said the program had been judged a success by London police and would be extended throughout London. Police studies have found that this policy freed officers from spending long hours processing paperwork from marijuana arrests and allowed them to focus on arresting traffickers. He also said police would still have the authority to arrest marijuana smokers in "aggravated" cases, such as when it is smoked in public near children. The change in approach in Britain and the rest of Europe has been criticized by Bush administration drug officials who say they are not in favor of any laws that encourage a proliferation of drug use. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl