Pubdate: Fri, 24 May 2002
Source: Royal Gazette, The (Bermuda)
Copyright: 2002 The Royal Gazette Ltd.
Contact:  http://www.theroyalgazette.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2103
Author: JONATHAN KENT, and HEATHER WOOD

BERMUDA UNLIKELY TO FOLLOW UK'S LEAD ON CANNABIS LAW

BRITAIN moved closer to ease rules on cannabis yesterday ­ but a drug abuse 
treatment expert said the same thing would not be acceptable in Bermuda, 
though the island's top police officer and a Government MP said there was 
scope for debate.

And the woman in charge of the National Drug Commission warned that if laws 
on cannabis were softened here, many young people would misread it as 
legalisation.

A report published in Britain yesterday, which drew on input from 
politicians, medical experts and police, urged the UK Government to relax 
rules on cannabis and ecstasy and to follow Dutch and Swiss models by 
offering heroin addicts safe fixes in "injecting rooms".

Government backbencher Dale Butler opposed any softening of drug laws, but 
conceded that the current approach was not winning the war against drugs 
and the public should decide if they wanted changes through a referendum.

"I think we should have a national debate on this," said Mr. Butler. 
"Personally, I would say, 'Let's not move in that direction', but at the 
same time I can see that the current approach does not seem to be working 
either. And I think the same thing is happening all over the world.

"Maybe we should be looking for alternatives and that is why I think we 
should have a national debate, public discussions and then possibly a 
referendum.

"We have tried the hard arm of the law and it has not delivered the type of 
results we would like to see.

"We need to know whether the countries that have experimented have been 
successful. From what I have read, there have been mixed results."

Christina Wineinger, chief executive of the National Drug Commission, 
warned that Bermuda had a culture in which teens smoked more cannabis than 
tobacco and consideration of a change in the law had to take the island's 
specific circumstances into account.

"We at the NDC have formed the opinion from our connection with Bermuda's 
youth that any move to lessen the penalties would be misunderstood by our 
youth as a move to legalise cannabis," said Ms Wineinger. "Even now more 
young people smoke cannabis than tobacco.

"There is plenty of evidence to show that cannabis is a major health risk 
in this community. We know, for example, that the long-term use of cannabis 
interferes with thinking and impairs judgment, memory and motivation.

"Chronic use can lead to motivational syndrome, which causes apathy and 
decreased motivation.

"Cannabis can depress the immune system and is more harmful to the lungs 
than tobacco."

Ms Wineinger added that the population survey taken in 1999 showed that 
only six per cent of adults approved of regular cannabis use."

She added that heroin was a significant problem on the island and there was 
a large ongoing methadone treatment for heroin addicts. And she did not 
warm to the idea of 'safe injecting rooms'.

"Heroin is extremely addictive and tough to recover from," said Ms 
Wineinger. "There are so many families suffering from its effects.

"Our strategy is to prevent people using it in the first place. For those 
who do suffer, treatment is best, not providing ways for them to use the drug."

Joanne Dill, programme manager for Turning Point which treats those 
suffering from drug abuse, said she did not believe that going "softer" on 
drugs would help address the drugs problem on the island.

"Personally, I don't think it would come in here, I don't think Bermuda's 
culture would facilitate it," she said. "I don't think it would be well 
accepted and it's not something we are thinking of doing.

"Providing injection rooms for heroin addicts is more about harm reduction 
than treatment and treatment is what we provide here.

"What harm reduction can do is to combat communicable diseases, like HIV 
and hepatitis, which can be spread by dirty needles."

UK Home Secretary David Blunkett has already said he would be inclined to 
downgrade cannabis to the lowest risk Class C drug category, making 
possession of it in small amounts a non-arrestable offence.

But there are basic differences in the law between Bermuda and the UK with 
regard to controlled drugs. The applicable law in Bermuda is the Misuse of 
Drugs Act 1972.

Police Commissioner Jonathan Smith explained: "One is the fact that a 
classification system exists for drugs ­ Class A, B and C, with Class A 
drugs being the 'harder' drugs. There is no such distinction in Bermuda 
legislation.

"The second difference is the fact that the 'softening' of the policy is 
being led by the UK Government with the publication of Home Office 
guidelines. No such guidelines exist here.

"The Service recognises that there is scope for a wide debate on the 
subject. However, no policy changes are being considered by the Service 
that would have the effect of 'softening' our approach towards drug 
enforcement.

Indeed, we fully support the work of the National Drug Commission in their 
work to educate the comunity on the dangers of drug use.

"We work steadfastly with many partners, including the United States Drug 
Enforcement Administration, H.M. Customs and many other law enforcement 
agencies to reduce the supply of drugs to our community."

Health & Family Services Minister Nelson Bascome did not answer messages 
from this newspaper left at his office yesterday.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart