Pubdate: Sun, 20 Feb 2005 Source: Observer, The (UK) Copyright: 2005 The Observer Contact: http://www.observer.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/315 Authors: Martin Bright and Tony Thompson, The Observer Cited: Transform http://www.tdpf.org.uk/ Cited: Association of Chief Police Officers http://www.acpo.police.uk/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?207 (Cannabis - United Kingdom) DRUG SURGE FOLLOWS CHANGE IN LAW Police Hit Out After Cannabis Hauls Demand for cannabis has exploded in the wake of the relaxation of drugs laws, according to senior Scotland Yard officers. A series of massive seizures in south-east England in recent weeks have alarmed law enforcement officials, who believe criminal gangs are trafficking large quantities of cannabis because they believe police 'have taken their eye off the ball'. Cannabis was reclassified from a Class B to a Class C drug in January 2004. The move was intended to enable forces around the country to focus on the trade in heroin and cocaine. But senior police at Scotland Yard believe this move has sent out the wrong message to the gangs, who are now switching their attention to the softer drug. 'One of the biggest growth areas is the shifting of organised crime towards cannabis importation,' said a senior officer connected to the Met's organised crime unit. 'The supply side has reacted to the liberalisation because they think law enforcement has taken its eye off the ball. We are now recovering tons of the drug at one time and that is something we were never doing before. The decision to reclassify was wrong.' Last night drug reformers reacted with fury to the police claims. Danny Kushlick, director of Transform, a pressure group which opposes drug prohibition, believes seizures are not an accurate indication of increasing supply or demand. 'No one knows how much is coming in, nor how big stockpiles are, so even a huge seizure cannot be seen as evidence of anything. The goalposts are moved depending on what people want to prove.' This month, police and Customs officers raided a pub in Dagenham, Essex, and recovered a record 1.37 tonnes of cannabis resin worth more than UKP4 million. In a separate operation a few days later, police stopped a lorry on the A20 near Folkestone, Kent, and recovered more than 600 kilos of cannabis resin. The Met's Assistant Commissioner, Tarique Ghaffur, who heads Scotland Yard's specialist crime directorate, described the finds as 'some of the biggest hauls of cannabis ever recovered'. Large seizures have also been made in Norfolk and Sussex in recent weeks. Reclassification is also blamed on an increase in the amount of home-grown cannabis entering the market. Last year, police in London uncovered one of the biggest cannabis farms in a south London warehouse, which used more than 6,500 plants to produce UKP1m of the drug each year. No official figures for London or the rest of England and Wales are available, but the concerns within the Met echo those of police in Scotland. With three months to run until the end of the statistical year, provisional figures show there has already been a 14 per cent increase in the amount of cannabis resin seized across the country. In Fife, seizures have risen tenfold in the past year. Detectives have also noted a significant increase in the number of home-grown cannabis plants being recovered. In Strathclyde, seizures of plants have more than doubled in the past year, while in Tayside there has been a sixfold increase. The price of cannabis resin has also fallen in Scotland, seen by many as a further indicator of an increased level of supply Last week, one of Britain's biggest drug barons, Curtis Warren, was charged with attempting to smuggle 500 kilos of cannabis into Britain, organising the venture from his Dutch jail cell. Sources say the fact that Warren, who made millions smuggling cocaine in the UK, has become involved with cannabis is a sign of how attractive and lucrative the trade has become. Studies have shown that reclassification has led to widespread confusion among Britain's youth, many of whom mistakenly believe the drug is now legal. The Observer has also learnt that cannabis production is increasing in the source countries. Earlier this month, customs officials in the north-eastern Indian state of Assam made their largest seizure of cannabis and arrested six smugglers who were going to transport 10 tonnes of the drug. Police concerns are not supported by the most recent figures from the British crime survey, indicating that cannabis use is falling, though these figures do not fully allow for the effect of reclassification. The Home Office said there was no evidence that the change had led to an increase in demand. A spokesman for the Association of Chief Police Officers said the position of chief constables remained unchanged. 'We continue to support the government's decision to reclassify cannabis.' - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake