Pubdate: Sat, 31 Jan 2004 Source: Daily Telegraph (UK) Copyright: 2004 Telegraph Group Limited Contact: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/114 Author: Alice Thomson CANNABIS: JUST A PEACEFUL WAY TO RELAX OR A POTENT THREAT? After this week's reclassification of one of Britain's most popular drugs, Alice Thomson spoke to 50 people involved in the debate. She was told of tragedy, desperation and hope - and found uncertainty among users, experts and the authorities "My 25-year-old son sat on my knee and cried. 'I've killed 30 million people - - I can't get the blood off my trainers,' he said. "I explained that he hadn't killed anyone, although he did try to stab his sister once. 'I am Stalin,' he said, as I drove him to the hospital. "The next night, our elderly neighbours found him climbing a ladder into their house, half naked. They'd known my son as an intelligent, happy teenager; now he was a wreck." Three weeks later, Sara's son shot himself at her brother's farm. "Before he died," she says, "he became convinced that it was cannabis that made him feel crazy." Hamish is a comedy writer who uses cannabis to help him unwind. "Coke gets me going for a party, and I prefer sharing a joint with my children over a video than watching them come home drunk," he says. "We should legalise drugs and spend the money helping the desperate cases in sink estates." This week, in the first substantial change to drugs laws for 30 years, cannabis has been downgraded from a class B drug to a class C drug, alongside tranquilisers and steroids. To counterbalance this, the Government has said that taking Class C drugs can be an arrestable offence. It has also promised a 1 million pound campaign on the dangers of drugs. The police forces I talked to are in chaos as they try to interpret the new regulations this weekend. Some are continuing with "zero tolerance"; others will turn a blind eye - just as Commander Brian Paddick suggested after his "softly softly" approach on cannabis in Lambeth. Some government advisers want to go one step further, with a review of the system classifying all illegal drugs, from ecstasy to heroin. One admitted: "All our narcotics thinking is based on the 1960s and enshrined in the 1971 Misuse of Drugs Act, when drugs were for the rich few. Now they affect everyone, and the drugs themselves have changed. We need a new way forward." The question is: have we already gone too far in relaxing our stance on drugs - or are we still too draconian? In Britain, four million people a year use one or more illicit drugs, and are technically breaking the law. A quarter of a million are termed problematic drug users by the Home Office. The social and economic costs of drugs have been estimated at 18 billion pounds a year, and an average of three people a week die of an overdose. Meanwhile, the Government spends 1.5 billion pounds a year trying to tackle drugs through law enforcement, education and rehabilitation. Cannabis is at the forefront of the argument. A poll for The Telegraph this week showed that the country is almost equally divided over whether the drug should be decriminalised. The young increasingly see it as less harmful and addictive than cigarettes, alcohol or chocolate, yet there is growing alarm within the medical and scientific professions that it may cause psychosis. Having talked to 50 of the most prominent people involved in the issue of drugs, I have discovered that it is often the police who privately call for decriminalisation while some of the biggest liberalisation campaigners of the 1970s, such as the former Tory MP Jonathan Aitken (who took LSD to prove his point), now want a tougher approach. The former drugs tsar Keith Hellawell is in favour of stricter regulations, while his former deputy has come to different conclusions. Labour MPs squabble among themselves, as do Tories. Only the Liberal Democrats have a coherent legalisation policy. Addicts call for tougher laws, while parents of some addicts suspect that their children could have been saved if drugs had been legal. Pro-legalisation campaigners, such as the journalist Sue Arnold, have complicated matters further: she changed her mind because her son became psychotic after smoking cannabis. The United Nations has rapped Britain over the knuckles for being too lenient, while the European Union is urging us to join a growing number of member countries that are lighting up behind the bike shed. No wonder the Government is in a haze. David Blunkett is now in charge of rolling out policy at the Home Office, but discussion at Westminster often gets mired in gossip about which minister smoked what in his or her pipe at university. Dame Ruth Runciman - who says "I'm a lifelong druggie" - has been involved in the drugs debate for 25 years and, as chairman of the Police Foundation Committee, was one of the first to advise the Government to downgrade cannabis. She now wants to see ecstasy downgraded from a class A to a class B drug. "The war on drugs is unrealistic," she says. "It takes four hours of a policeman's time to caution a person over drugs use, and that gives them a criminal record. Eighty per cent of women in jail are there on drug-related issues. It's a waste of resources and harming vulnerable young people's lives. We need to concentrate all our money on treatment." Mr Hellawell has been pushing the treatment line for 10 years, although he disagrees with Lady Runciman's softly, softly approach. "The reclassification has given the amber light for legalisers, yet evidence increasingly shows the dangers even of cannabis," he says. "You shouldn't drive, use machinery or take exams on it, yet the young now think cannabis actually helps your driving skills. It's like the difference between shoplifting and aggravated burglary: just because we need to crack down hard on violent crime, it doesn't mean that we should allow everyone to nick stuff." His former deputy Mike Trace, who now runs the Bleinham project for crack addicts in Notting Hill, west London, says that it is hard to force people into treatment. "You need to give people a choice: stop mugging grannies and get treatment, or it's jail. I'm interested in legalisation, but if it dramatically increased numbers, there is no way we could deal with that." Roger Howard, the head of Crime Concern, is wary of treatment alone. "The overwhelming majority of serious drug users have lots of other problems. Banging them up is a disaster, but treatment alone is not enough." Howard Marks, the biggest cannabis dealer of the 1980s, who was jailed for drug pushing, believes legalisation is the only way forward. "That would take much of the sordidness out of the business. Every culture needs something to numb the drudgery of life." Andrew Brown has tried everything in excess. "At first, it was just like my parents having a gin and tonic. A friend at school became psychotic on cannabis, but I've always kidded myself that heroin is pure. "By the end, I had pawned everything. I was watching pregnant girls taking crack, and laughing." Andrew went into treatment four times. "Treatment is not enough - only 30 per cent complete their course. You need help with jobs and housing afterwards because the depression can get so bad." Danny Kushlick, director of Transform, which lobbies the Government for greater liberalisation, says: "Every time the Government hits down on the supply side, it just drives the price up and so crime increases. Our policy so far has been a disaster. We have gone from 5,000 heroin users in 1971 to 250,000 now. "The only answer is to legalise drugs and reduce demand through education. Cannabis could be sold through off-licences, and ecstasy and cocaine could be bought from pharmacists. Boots would be far better than pushers." Jonathan Yeo, the painter and son of a Tory shadow minister, took cannabis to fight nausea while recuperating from cancer. "Adults should make up their own minds," he says. "Horse-riding is dangerous, but we don't ban it." Fulton Gillespie, whose son died of a heroin overdose, believes that legalised drugs would have kept him alive. "He died from adulterated heroin. At least if the Government were in control, we could check the quality." But Roger Aston, whose son was jailed for life for the death of two war veterans, says cannabis started his son's descent into crime. He is preparing to protest against re-classification outside police headquarters in Birmingham. Marjorie Wallace, the chief executive of the mental health charity Sane, agrees that any relaxation of laws sends out the wrong message. "For 17 years, I have been accumulating anecdotal evidence that cannabis may cause psychosis," she says. "For a small proportion of young people, this drug is terrifying. It robs them of their souls." She believes that education alone is not enough. "Those one million leaflets the Government is now sending out are like flowers on the graves of the dead. Reclassifying has already sent out the message that cannabis isn't dangerous." Sir John Stevens, the Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, says the new change in law has caused "a massive amount of muddle". But the chief constables I talked to cannot agree on the way forward. Eddie Ellison, retired head of Scotland Yard's Drug Squad, says: "I'm a legaliser. More than 50 per cent of crime is from drug abuse. A 200-pound-a-day habit needs 2,000 pounds worth of burglaries a day. We should hand out hard drugs for free from clinics to addicts - it would cost us far less." Chris White, drugs co-ordinator for Tayside Police, says: "The bad buggers [the pushers] need to be put away for longer, when you see the devastation they cause." Jan Berry, chairman of the Police Federation, admits: "The police desperately need clarity and a mature debate. We don't want a nanny state, and after all, alcohol is a greater problem for us. But, at the moment, it is pandemonium with the new rules." Jonathan Aitken, who has been in jail, says: "I learnt an awful lot about drugs in prison - there are hundreds of cocktails circulating with exotic names, and you can easily come out with a 500-pounds-a-week habit. But I'd create drug-free wings and use prison to help people off drugs. My daughter Petrina, who has had a problem with cannabis, has convinced me that legalisation may not be the way forward." The British Medical Association is worried that the public is receiving the wrong messages. "It's bizarre that just as we see cigarettes being banned in public places, people think they can now smoke cannabis on the streets," one doctor comments. The British Lung Foundation is also concerned. Dr Richard Russell, a consultant in respiratory medicine at Wexham Park, Slough, says: "Three cannabis joints equal 20 cigarettes. All drugs hit your immune system, making you more vulnerable." The medical experts are backed by school teachers. Bob Carstairs, of the Secondary Heads Association, says: "Downgrading of drugs will be a nightmare for teachers trying to get the message across to eight-year-olds that cannabis smoking can harm the body. "A child's grades can really suffer if he smokes it. Cigarettes and the occasional alcoholic binge don't affect academic and sporting performance in the same way." Susan Greenfield, professor of pharmacology at Oxford University, studies the effects of drugs on the mind. "I find it extraordinary that we want to criminalise something as irrelevant as foxhunting, while legalising something as explosive as cannabis," she says. "Cannabis has a devastating effect on brain cells." Hamish Turner, the president of the Coroners' Society, says cannabis is increasingly the factor behind deaths recorded as accidents or suicides. Prof John Henry, a toxicology expert at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, west London, puts this down to the increased strength of the drug. "Until the early 1990s, there was less than one per cent of tetrahydrocannabinol in most cannabis. Now the most potent form, skunk, contains up to 30 per cent." After hearing the evidence, most MPs on the Home Affairs select committee thought that cannabis should be downgraded. Some privately advocate legalisation. But Kate Hoey, the Labour MP for Vauxhall, disagrees. "My area has been a guinea pig for liberalisation. People started smoking cannabis on the stairwells, on the street. Elderly people and young mums had to fight their way through gangs of children high on cannabis." Her views are backed by the Rev Chris Ande-Watson, a Baptist minister in Brixton, who says: "Cannabis kills dreams, kills ambition, and - left unchecked - destroys communities." Clare Gerada works as a GP specialising in drug abuse in south London. "In my worst moments, I say legalise and be damned. Then I see a desperate addict, and realise that our laws may be an ass but they were vaguely effective. We take the brakes off at our peril." Others in Brixton say the experiment has been a success. Paul Paine, who lives on Brixton Hill, says: "The police have been able to concentrate on the crack and heroin addicts, crime has gone down and there are fewer nutters on the streets." It's up to the Home Office now. Which way is Caroline Flint, the drugs minister, heading? "We have to concentrate on class A drugs. We have no firm evidence that cannabis causes psychosis," she says. "We are now spending 500 million pounds a year on treating 140,000 people and we're providing drugs education for more than 96 per cent of secondary schools." For Lilian Barker's son, it might be too late. Her husband died of a heart attack six months after their son tried to strangle him while hallucinating on drugs. He has been through three rehabilitation programmes but still harangues her for money. "While everyone argues, my son may die," she says. "Until we have a rational debate, there is only one thing we should all be saying: 'Just say no.' " - --- MAP posted-by: Josh