Pubdate: Thu, 17 Nov 2011
Source: Guardian, The (UK)
Contact:  2011 Guardian News and Media Limited
Website: http://www.guardian.co.uk/guardian/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/175
Author: Cherry Wilson
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

EX-HEAD OF MI5 CALLS ON GOVERNMENT TO DECRIMINALISE AND REGULATE CANNABIS

Change Policy and Look at Alternative Ways of Combating UK's Drugs 
Culture, Says Eliza Manningham-Buller

The former head of MI5 believes the "war on drugs" has proved 
fruitless and it is time to consider decriminalising the possession 
and use of small quantities of cannabis.

Eliza Manningham-Buller has backed calls for the government to set up 
a commission to examine how to tackle the UK's drug culture and 
consider the highly controversial move of relaxing the law.

She was speaking at a meeting held by the All Party Parliamentary 
Group on Drug Policy Reform on Thursday where senior government 
representatives met experts from across the world to consider ways of 
combating the issue.

The cross-bench peer said the current policy was failing and it was 
time to look at alternative ways of tackling the production and use 
of drugs by assessing how other countries are dealing with the 
problem. She believes serious consideration needs to be given to the 
idea of regulating cannabis so that its psychotic effects can be 
controlled more closely.

"For the next 50, years do we continue on the same well-worn policy 
track which has proved so successful so far?," she said. "Or will we 
acknowledge the truth, that we are unlikely to address the harm that 
is being caused to the world unless we accept, as the US Senate 
recently did, that much [not all] of the vast expenditure on the so 
called 'war on drugs' has been fruitless?

"Would harm be reduced if cannabis was regulated so that its more 
dangerous components, which can lead to psychosis, were eliminated? 
Should we follow Portugal's example and focus on drug use as a health 
issue rather than a crime issue?"

Manningham-Buller said there was too much of a knee-jerk opposition 
to changing drug policy but it is an issue that needs to be at the 
forefront of national debate.

She urged politicians to come up with a more successful way of 
tackling the issue by assessing evidence that looks at how to reduce 
the harmful effects of drugs in a cost-effective approach.

Christian Guy, policy director of the Centre for Social Justice, 
agreed that the war on drugs was failing but said it would be 
dangerous to "wave a white flag in surrender".

He added: "Giving up the fight to tackle illicit drug use now would 
be disastrous; it would further fuel the social breakdown and 
addiction poverty which destroys so many lives.

"It would send the wrong signal to those who are counting on our help."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom