Pubdate: Tue, 26 Mar 2002 Source: Reuters (Wire) Copyright: 2002 Reuters Limited Author: Mark John WHIFF OF CANNABIS STIRS FRENCH PRESIDENT RACE PARIS - The acrid scent of cannabis wafted into France's presidential race on Tuesday as Socialist Prime Minister Lionel Jospin stirred controversy by suggesting occasional smokers should be treated with leniency. Supporters of conservative President Jacques Chirac, his neck-and-neck rival in the April 21 vote, slammed the remarks as irresponsible while the country's pro-legalisation lobby called for a proper debate on reform of France's tough drug laws. Jospin, who has previously owned up to having smoked cannabis himself twice, started it all by telling an interviewer on Monday: "Smoking a joint at home is certainly less dangerous than drinking and driving." He added that outright legalisation would send the wrong signal to the young but insisted France's 32-year-old drug laws should be applied "in an intelligent manner" towards users. With law and order the dominant issue so far in the election campaign, the comments drew swift condemnation on Tuesday from Chirac's Rally for the Republic (RPR) party. "This is typical of the attitude of his government, whose ministers have sought time and again to trivialise this issue," said RPR deputy Bernard Accoyer, referring to earlier calls on the left to reform drug laws. "He clearly has no idea of the real damage caused (by cannabis)," Accoyer said in a statement. Some four million French are believed to smoke cannabis, whether in the form of hashish resin or marijuana leaves. Some European countries are increasingly turning a blind eye to small users as they refocus police efforts on hard drugs such as heroin or cocaine. In France, someone caught in possession of enough cannabis for one joint could face jail as a dealer. Jospin suggested during his victorious 1997 parliamentary election campaign that he would look at relaxing French laws on soft drugs, but then backpedalled amid protests from the right. The left-leaning magazine Le Nouvel Observateur said in a website editorial posted on Tuesday that legalisation would mean fewer backstreet dealers working on high margins and also supplying hard drugs. "Instead of being run by gangsters, it would be in the hands of a few well-regulated professionals," it argued. Only two of over a dozen candidates in the presidential race back outright legalisation -- the Greens' Noel Mamere and Olivier Besancenot, a 27-year-old Trotskyite postman. Analysts say French attitudes on soft drugs are linked closely to overall political leanings. They talk about the "joint-smoking left" and the "red-wine-drinking right." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth