Pubdate: Sun, 04 Jan 2009 Source: Daily Mail (UK) Copyright: 2009 Associated Newspapers Ltd Contact: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/108 Author: Matthew Hickley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) HOME SECRETARY JACQUI SMITH TO OPPOSE DOWNGRADING OF ECSTASY DESPITE ADVICE FROM DRUG EXPERTS Jacqui Smith is on a collision course with the Government's drug experts over their belief that ecstasy should be downgraded. The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) will publish a report later this month which is expected to call for the rave drug - currently blamed for around 30 deaths a year across the UK - to be reclassified from Class A to Class B. Home Office sources have made clear the council's review of ecstasy was 'hugely unwelcome' and signalled that the Home Secretary will reject any such advice. The looming row comes just months after the Government brushed aside the ACMD's advice on cannabis by restoring the drug from Class C to Class B status - overruling the panel's claims that the drug is not harmful enough. A second clash will threaten the already shaky relationship and raise serious doubts over whether the system of experts advising Home Office ministers is working. Critics have accused the Advisory Council of pushing a liberal, pro-drugs agenda - while ACMD insiders have voiced frustration at what they see as ministers framing drugs policies based on political judgements rather than scientific evidence. Senior Home Office sources said they 'fully expected' the ACMD to call for ecstasy to be reclassified. A spokeswoman said the ACMD's review of the law - which was not requested by ministers - was 'hugely unwelcome'. She added: 'Ecstasy can and does kill unpredictably. There is no such thing as a 'safe dose'. The Government firmly believes that ecstasy should remain a Class A drug.' Shadow Home Secretary Dominic Grieve backed the Government's stance, saying: 'Drugs wreck lives and destroy communities. Ecstasy is a drug that is very damaging.' The ACMD's chairman Professor David Nutt has suggested that the drug causes less harm than alcohol or tobacco, and that it is probably too highly classified. As a Class A drug ecstasy is currently ranked alongside heroin and cocaine. Possession is punishable with up to seven years in jail, while dealers can be jailed for life. Class B drugs carry a five year sentence for possession, while for Class C the maximum punishment is two years. Dealing Class B or Class C drugs is punishable by up to 14 years in jail. Critics have hit out at the ACMD, questioning whether it was a fit body to advice ministers. David Raynes of the National Drug Prevention Alliance, said the panel should be 'an impartial centre of expertise carefully weighing evidence and public good' But he said it appeared to be 'controlled by a few ideologues, pursuing a broadly liberal and pro-drug, legalisation agenda.' Mary Brett, UK spokeswoman for Europe Against Drugs, said: 'The present ACMD includes few members who take a definite drug-prevention stance. It is imperative that a committee of this importance needs to be properly balanced.' Home Office figures show illegal use of ecstasy has been broadly stable since the mid 1990s. Around 470,000 adults admit using the drug with in the past twelve months - making it the third most popular illegal drug behind cocaine, with 740,000 users, and cannabis with around 2.4million. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin