Pubdate: Sun, 16 Sep 2007
Source: Independent on Sunday (UK)
Copyright: Independent Newspapers Ltd.
Contact:  http://www.independent.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/208
Author: Nina Lakhani
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?207 (Cannabis - United Kingdom)

RECLASSIFICATION OF CANNABIS 'FUELS YOUTH CRIME WAVE'

In Some Areas, Nine Out of 10 Take the Drug - and Those WHO Work With 
Them Say the Situation Is Out of Control.

Cannabis use among Britain's young offenders is "out of control", up
by 75 per cent in some areas and fuelling a crime epidemic, with
youngsters stealing to fund their addictions, according to two studies.

A national survey of Youth Offending Teams indicates that two-thirds
of them have seen an increase in cannabis use of between 25 per cent
and 75 per cent since David Blunkett, the then Home Secretary,
downgraded the drug to class C in 2004. Some 90 per cent of all young
offenders are using cannabis in some areas, a far greater proportion
than the general youth population.

Research carried out by King's College London has indicated that 25
per cent of young offenders in Sheffield have turned to crime to fund
their habit. This contrasts with previous government research which
said that "cannabis use was unlikely to motivate crime".

A rise in young people smoking cannabis openly has led to a rise in
the fear of crime in the community, leading Sheffield's police chief
to warn of the threat that cannabis poses to the "fabric of society".

Fifty out of 51 of the youth courts in England and Wales are so
alarmed that they have written to Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary,
urging an upgrading of cannabis back to class B. Within a month of
Gordon Brown taking over as Prime Minister in June, Ms Smith signalled
a review of the controversial decision to downgrade cannabis amid
growing fears of the serious mental health implications of stronger
varieties of the drug, first highlighted in the IoS in March.

A detailed review in The Lancet concluded that the drug increases the
risk of psychosis by 40 per cent - and younger users are most at risk.
But Mr Blunkett's decision to reclassify the drug three years ago has
had another, more sinister impact, with organised crime taking a much
more active role in the production and distribution of cannabis.

Detectives say that the changing nature of cannabis - as imported
cannabis gives way to the much more damaging skunk variety, grown in
this country - has also played into the hands of criminals. Drugs
experts and police also say that Britain for the first time is an
exporter of the drug.

John House, the Chief Superintendent of South Yorkshire Police, said:
"Cannabis production in this country is rising exponentially. We used
to be a net importer of cannabis from places like Morocco, but there
are indications that we are now starting to export cannabis."

Youth Offending Teams said that since reclassification dealers were
finding it easier to convince young people to try what they now
wrongly regarded as a relatively harmless drug.

Nationwide, YOTs deal with 10,000 youngsters up to the age of 17 who
come before the courts, but whose punishment falls short of being sent
to a secure unit.

Darren Johnson, the secretary of the Association of Youth Offending
Team Managers, said that cannabis consumption was "out of control" in
some areas, with nine in every 10 youth offenders reporting that they
used the drug.

Overall, official figures suggest cannabis use is stable, but that
masks a very different picture among the most vulnerable youngsters in
society, say experts.

Lord Ramsbotham, the former chief inspector of prisons, said:
"Downgrading cannabis was a mistake because it made it out to be less
dangerous than it is. Adult minds and adolescent minds are different
and young people must not play games with this stuff. "

Ch Supt House, who commissioned the King's College research, said:
"The reclassification of cannabis was a decision taken based on a
different drug. It wasn't taken bearing in mind the strength of new
cannabis, or the potential damage to social fabric caused by open
cannabis smoking in the street by those who don't perceive it as a
serious crime."

The number of cannabis factories closed down by the Metropolitan
Police has more than doubled in the past two years as organised gangs
invest more in cannabis production. In March, the charity DrugScope
revealed that, on average, UK police were raiding three cannabis farms
a day with 400 plants regularly recovered at raids. Around two-thirds
to three-quarters of UK cannabis farms are now run by Vietnamese
criminal gangs.

Tim Hollis, the Chief Constable of Humberside, and chairman of the
Association of Chief Police Officers drugs committee, said: "A large
number of police forces are increasingly coming across cannabis
factories, where there is significant investment by criminals in the
infrastructure to produce cannabis in considerable quantities. There
is increasing evidence of the scale and the geographic spread. This
isn't just happening in urban areas, now we are finding them in the
more traditional, rural areas."

Growing new strains of cannabis under ultra-violet lights, dealers are
producing stronger varieties such as skunk, linked with the massive
rise in cannabis-related hospital admissions and addictions among
young people. These have triggered the current government review by
the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs into whether cannabis
should revert to being a class B drug.

The Home Secretary will announce her decision next April - and experts
are divided, with many believing the most pressing issue is one of
mental health provision rather than primarily an issue of
criminality.

Professor Sue Bailey, a forensic psychiatrist who works with young
offenders with mental health problems, said: "From my own experience
in clinical practice over the last three years I can say cannabis use
has increased, the amounts young people are smoking have increased but
the most critical factor is that they seem to be starting younger."

Emma Warren, a mentor at Live, a magazine produced by young people in
south London where half of the youngsters are referred by agencies
such as YOTs and the Probation Service, said: "Cannabis is seen as
very everyday, it is normalised, even more so than in previous
generations. While most people who smoke do so recreationally, the
ones that do fall, fall harder now than they did before."

Mann-Ray, a 19-year-old photographer with Live, has never used
cannabis but sees it as a part of everyday life. He said: "Everybody
smokes now, even sensible people. They think it's not a big deal, that
it's as harmless as air. In the past people used to hide it, but now
they are really open, even at college."

This worrying trend continues, according to Clare McNeil, spokeswoman
for Addaction, a drug treatment charity: "Over half the young people
we work with are being seen due to cannabis use and a quarter of these
are using skunk - a proportion that is growing. Cannabis is seen by
young people as a 'safe' drug and many young people will smoke skunk
in the same way as they drink lager. Whether cannabis is class B or C
doesn't make any difference to the young people we work with, many of
whom actually think the drug is legal."

Rethink, the mental health charity, is calling for young people to be
educated on the dangers of the drug after its research found that
around half of young people think cannabis is safer than alcohol and a
quarter say that it is better for you than coffee.

"Jacqui Smith should use the current review to deliver the 'massive'
public education campaign which Charles Clarke promised in 2005," says
Jane Harris, the head of campaigns at Rethink. "This is the key task,
which we should all focus on instead of fiddling with the
classification system."

And Darren Johnson, spokesman for YOT managers, said: "The main impact
of reclassification would not necessarily be a change in use but
rather a change in the police approach to it, namely the police would
arrest more young people, thus bringing more into the criminal justice
system."

Police or politicians alone will not be able to solve the problem, says
Chief Constable Hollis: "Young people do not make choices based on the
classification of drugs... we need to think about how we communicate with
them to make better-informed choices, which is quite a challenge, but I
think it needs some real humility and for us to be honest with ourselves.
Clearly the police have a role to play... but anyone who thinks a police
officer or a politician in a grey suit can stand up and say, 'Don't do this,
children, because...' and thinks that will have a huge impact is naive."

Vox Youth: Confusion on the Street About the Effects of Cannabis

Adam, 19, Newcastle

Cannabis is about as bad for you as smoking cigarettes, but I have
heard it can mess up your short-term memory

Ina, 21, Australia

You can get addicted to it, but there are also advantages, like you
sleep better and it makes you hungry so you can put on weight

Malwina, 21, London

Cannabis is really addictive. I had a friend who smoked dope and he
became really aggressive, like he was a different person

Reece, 16, London

It's not that bad for you, better than cigarettes I think. It eases
your stress but I think the police would take it off you

Marta, 16, London

It's really bad, so I think you would get arrested and in a lot of
trouble with your parents

'I Can't Believe What a Horror I Was'

David, 22, from Brixton, south London;

"I dropped out of school when I was 13, a few months after I started
smoking weed. Looking back, it made my concentration and behaviour
worse but I couldn't see that then, so I left.

"I smoked UKP20 worth every day and started robbing people to pay for
it. I would threaten violence to show off to my mates and make myself
feel bigger and get my anger out. Once you've got street cred it feels
so good. You get respect - it's like being a bank manager.

"I got charged with ABH and robbery when I was 14 but didn't stop and
went to prison at 18. I can't believe what a horrible kid I was. While
I wouldn't recommend it, prison helped me realise I wanted to change.
I took a catering course and finally found something I loved. My
mentor at 'Live' magazine encouraged me to apply for Jamie Oliver's
15. I thought he was crazy, but when they told me I was in, it felt
like I was going to explode with happiness. My mum was so proud -
that's what I really wanted.

"I stopped smoking completely, and I feel happier, less angry and more
confident. Now I want be a TV chef, like Jamie." NL
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