One of the few good thing that the notorious Blair government did, courtesy of David Blunkett, was to make cannabis a Class C drug, Now, in the face of expert opinion, the man who bankrolled and disastrous war in Iraq which has claimed the lives of a million or so people and who supported a war of aggression in Afghanistan which has lead to that countries decimation and for the the supply of heroin on the streets of the UK to soar, wants to incarcerate innocent cannabis users. Brown is unfit to be PM. He was not elected PM and never should have assumed the role. It is very dangerous to have politicians who think their uninformed prejudices are more important than the well founded views of experts.
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Europe: British Drug Advisors Say Leave Marijuana Where It Is, But PM Brown Is Set to Ignore Them
http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/...classification
BBC News reported Thursday that the
Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD), the official body that advises the British government on drug policy, is recommending that marijuana remain as a lower category Class C drug rather than be rescheduled as a more serious Class B drug. That puts the ACMD at odds with Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who has clearly signaled that he wants to see marijuana rescheduled.
But rescheduling marijuana in the face of the ACMD's recommendations would put the Labor government in the awkward position of rejecting the findings of the 23-member panel of drug experts -- something it has never done before.
Marijuana was originally scheduled as Class B drug, with possession punishable by up to five years in prison, but was rescheduled as Class C (up to two years in prison) in 2004 after an ACMD review of the evidence. The ACMD again reviewed marijuana in 2006 and found no reason to reschedule it. Prime Minister Brown then asked the ACMD to again review marijuana.
The BBC is reporting that this third review will maintain the ACMD's position that marijuana should remain a Class C drug.
That will put the advisory panel in direct conflict with Brown, who has from the beginning of his tenure signaled he wanted marijuana to return to Class B. Earlier this week, at his
monthly news conference, he was at it again.
He said that while he would consider the ACMD's report, he felt that changing the law was necessary. "I believe that if we are sending out a signal particularly to teenagers, and particularly those at the most vulnerable age, young teenagers, that we in any way find cannabis acceptable, given all that we now know about the changes in the way cannabis is being sold in this country, that is not the right thing to do," he said. "My personal view has been pretty well known for some time. Given the changing nature of the stock of cannabis that is coming into the country and greater damage that that appears to be doing to people who use it, there is a stronger case for sending out a signal that cannabis is not only illegal but it is unacceptable."
The ACMD has not released its official recommendation, but is expected to do so later this month. The Home Office will decide in May whether to take a bold step backwards on marijuana policy.