Pubdate: Tue, 01 Feb 2005 Source: West Australian (Australia) Copyright: 2005 West Australian Newspapers Limited Contact: http://www.thewest.com.au Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/495 Author: Cathy O'Leary Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) DOCTORS DEMAND TOUGHER DRUG LAWS WA doctors have reignited cannabis laws as a critical election issue, demanding the state's soft drug regime be replaced by criminal charges and substantially tougher penalties. The Australian Medical Association said last night the existing laws, which allow those caught with a small amount of cannabis to either pay on-the-spot fines of up to $150 or attend educational seminars, failed to deter young marijuana users, some of whom would move on to harder drugs. The AMA attacked the State Government for introducing the laws last year and then accused the Opposition of being "wishy-washy" on the issue, saying it wanted a Coalition commitment to dump the on-the-spot fines if it won the election. The doctors lobby believes thousands of parents around the State are vehemently opposed to the decriminalisation of marijuana. They believe promises to introduce tougher laws would prove a political winner for both parties. Under the laws introduced last year, people caught with less than 30g of cannabis or with smoking implements can either pay a fine of up to $150 or attend a drug education session. They also allow households to grow up two cannabis plants without the occupants facing criminal charges, instead providing for them to be fined $200 or sent to education sessions. AMA WA president Paul Skerritt said WA's "soft-on-drugs experiment" had been a dismal failure and the State Government should withdraw the ill-conceived laws. He said politicians needed to send a strong message to the community, particularly young people, that so-called recreational drugs were dangerous and socially unacceptable. Giving police discretion to issue infringement notices rather than laying criminal charges was an experiment which had failed. "Figures for the first three months of the new cannabis laws showed that almost half of the 1000 infringement notices were ignored," he said. "That means the offenders thought the new laws were a joke and not to be taken seriously. There is also plenty of evidence to show that a big percentage of cannabis users tend to move on to harder drugs which are also rampant in our community." Dr Skerritt said he was not advocating a move to draconian laws or sending everyone who used drugs off to jail. But he said a tougher line accompanied by better drug education in schools and more rehabilitation programs were long overdue. The idea that cannabis was a soft drug should be dead and buried, he said. Apart from being a gateway to harder drugs, it was dangerous in itself. "Cannabis can provoke very serious mental illnesses and its risks are not to be taken lightly," he said. "These drugs are not a simple bit of fun or a case of 'boys will be boys', so we don't think a little slap on the wrist is the appropriate way to deal with them. It's a criminal offence and should be dealt with that way." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin