- Source: The Sunday Times
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- EDINBURGH
BIDS TO BE AMSTERDAM OF NORTH
-
- ("they
love the flavour of that freedom".)
-
- By David Connett
If you want to take the "high" road to
Scotland, head for Edinburgh, where there is growing
pressure for the city to approve cannabis cafes in an
attempt to create an "Amsterdam of the north".
Support for the move is rising as the traditionally
conservative city builds a reputation for street parties
and liberal tolerance. It is also
planning a CCTV-protected "tolerance zone" for
prostitutes. Pete Irvine, one of Scottish tourism's most
influential voices, has backed
calls for the cannabis cafes.
"I'm not proposing Scotland becomes a magnet for
dopers," says Irvine, awarded the CBE for directing
celebrations to mark the royal opening of the
Scottish parliament. "But Amsterdam has made an
industry out of a few cafes that sell hashish."
He suggests that a similar scheme in Edinburgh would show
that Scotland was "enlightened and different".
The benefits, he believes, would outweigh the problems.
"Amsterdam may be seedy, but that city's tourism is
booming. Most people who go there don't necessarily visit
cannabis cafes, but they love the flavour of that
freedom."
Plans to test the city's tolerance for cannabis are
already under way. The publisher Kevin Williamson, who
discovered Irvine Welsh, the author of
Trainspotting, a book and film about drugs, says he plans
to open a cannabis cafe early in the summer.
Williamson says there is widespread support for cannabis
to be commercially available in licensed premises and out
of the hands of criminals.
Such arguments have already found favour: a newspaper
poll revealed that four out of five local people were in
favour of the idea. It even has
support from some local officials.
The Liberal Democrat councillor Mike Pringle says:
"I have always been in favour of legalising
cannabis. Edinburgh is far more forward-looking than
other cities. I wouldn't use the cafes myself, but I know
a lot of people who would."
Critics insist Edinburgh will suffer if it inhales the
drug cafe culture.
Tory councillor Daphne Sleigh says it will take the city
downmarket. "Amsterdam is sleazy and vile, so why
are we trying to emulate it?" she says.
The city has, however, already taken steps along the road
to being an international party venue and the police
force has started a drive to
recruit gays, lesbians and ethnic minorities. Some senior
officers are open-minded on how to deal with cannabis.
As deputy chief constable of Lothian and Borders police,
Tom Wood was dubbed Scotland's "rock'n'roll
copper" when he successfully policed
Edinburgh's biggest party in the past 1,000 years: the
millennium Hogmanay. "There must be a debate on the
law because it is 30 years old and society has moved
on," says Wood. "I don't have a view on the
decriminalisation of cannabis. But we cannot simply go on
adopting the same tactics and reactions to the problems
of drugs."
Like David Blunkett, the home secretary, Wood is watching
the progress of a policing scheme in Brixton, south
London, which effectively decriminalises possession of
cannabis. The initiative is thought to have saved police
2,000 hours of form-filling after arrests, allowing them
to concentrate on gun crime and cracking down on hard
drugs.
As a result some observers believe Blunkett is likely to
reclassify cannabis as a class C drug, making small-scale
possession a non- arrestable
offence. It could open the way for cannabis cafes.
In Scotland the row turns as much on what kind of city
Edinburgh really is.
Professor John McLeod, principal of the Free Church
college, says Edinburgh's image as a Calvinistic city is
misplaced. "Historically it has always been
progressive. It prides itself on being culturally and
intellectually avant-garde," he says. "There is
also a practical argument. There is only so much the
police can do. Some crimes cannot be eradicated."