- Source: The
Observer
-
Cannabis should be sold at licensed outlets such as pubs,
cafes and shops, according to a confidential survey of
police forces, courts, probation officers and drug care
workers. Eighty-one per cent of the 300 groups surveyed
said that a system of licensed distribution should be
introduced as soon as possible.
The lawful sale of cannabis is seen by campaigners as the
next step in liberalising the drug after its
reclassification as a class C substance,
announced last month by Home Secretary David Blunkett.
The survey, conducted among the members of the
government-backed charity DrugScope, will ignite fierce
controversy. Anti-drug campaigners are furious at the
increasingly relaxed attitude of police towards the drug.
A licensing system would cover cafes and pubs, and GPs
would be able to prescribe the drug.
The results of the survey will next week be put before
the home affairs select committee inquiry into drugs,
acting as a powerful indication to MPs of how law
enforcement bodies privately feel about the threat
cannabis causes.
Police have long argued that the pursuit of users
detracts from the fight against organised criminals who
engineer the drug's supply. Roger Howard, chief executive
of DrugScope and a member of Blunkett's influential
advisory committee, said: 'buying cannabis will still
lead people into transactions with organised crime and
drug dealers who may also be selling other and more
harmful drugs.'