Source: Scotland On Sunday Author: Jim McLean Contact: Pubdate: Sun, 4 Jan 1998 STRAW BOWS TO CANNABIS CALL Pressure is growing for cannabis to be decriminilised in the wake of the drug fiasco centring on Home Secretary Jack Straw and his 17-year-old son William. Straw said yesterday that if campaigners could prove the drug was not dangerous, the government would have to think again about legalising it. John McAllion, the Labour MP for Dundee East, has called for a Royal Commission to be set up "to get all the facts out in the open". McAllion said it was time to end the hypocrisy surrounding the way society treats other consumer drugs, such as alcohol and tobacco. "A previous Scottish Select Committee shied away from the decriminilisation call by only one vote.... I think a Royal Commission is a good thing." But David Macauley, Director of Scotland Against Drugs and a former pharmacist, said: "To immediately go towards making cannabis freely available is nonsense. Drug misuse is no respector of social class or daddy's job. What Mr Straw has learned is the same lesson that 90 per cent of Scottish families will have to wake up to." Straw, who spent most of yesterday at home with his family, has led the government's crusade against parents who cannot control unruly children. He emphasised that at present there is no evidence to force a change in the law on cannabis. He said he believed "quite a lot" of pupils at his son's school used cannabis and insisted he believed it should remain illegal. "If drug companies and pressure groups can come forward and say, first, that it has medical therapeutic uses, let them do so. If they can prove this drug is not [narcotic and dangerous], of course we will have to think about it again."