|
News Release |
1001
Connecticut Ave, NW - Ste 710 - Washington, DC 20036 |
July 26, 2001
British Government to Consider Relaxing Pot Laws
London,
United Kingdom: A powerful House of Commons committee is poised to
begin a formal inquiry into the decriminalization of marijuana. The move
comes amid growing political pressure from several high-ranking government
officials and law enforcement agencies, including Scotland Yard, to liberalize
England's pot laws.
"There is a big debate [regarding
marijuana policy] going on outside Parliament among serious people in the
criminal justice system," announced House Affairs Committee Chairman Chris
Mullin, who will oversee the inquiry. "Until now, politicians have tended
to shy away from it but we think the time has come for a serious assessment of
the way we deal with drugs."
NORML Executive Director R. Keith
Stroup applauded the decision. "The agenda of this commission is a direct
response to the growing public and political pressure in England to legalize
marijuana," he said. According to the results of a July 15 Guardian
Unlimited - ICM opinion poll, 65 percent of Britons believe prosecuting pot
offenders should be law enforcement's lowest priority.
The committee will commence in
October to debate the pros and cons of decriminalization and other "practical
alternatives" to marijuana prohibition. Legislators are expected to
strongly consider the recommendations of Britain's Police Foundation - an
independent criminal justice research organization - which last year endorsed
removing criminal penalties for pot possession. Last month, newly
appointed British Home Office Secretary David Blunkett called on Parliament to
begin an "adult, intelligent debate" on Britain's marijuana policies.
Since then, several prominent legislators, including former Tory deputy leader
Peter Lilley have spoken out in favor of legalizing marijuana.
"Nothing could more vividly dramatize
[the] reaffirmation of our belief in freedom and personal responsibility than to
move clearly in favor of liberalizing the law on cannabis," said Lilley, who
supports legalizing pot sales to citizens 18-years-old and over.
This week's announcement is the
latest in a series of sweeping drug policy reforms taking place in England.
Recently, government officials ordered police and custom officers to cease
targeting marijuana violators - including smugglers and dealers - and instead
focus their efforts on Class A (hard) drugs. The move followed a decision
by Scotland Yard to issue verbal warnings to pot offenders in southern London in
lieu of fines or arrest. In addition, MP Jon Owens Jones (Cardiff
Central), a former Labour and Welsh Health Minister, introduced legislation last
week in the House of Commons to "legalize and regulate the sale, supply and use
of cannabis for recreational and therapeutic purposes."
Jones said he backs legalization
because "the U.K. has the most coercive laws in Europe on cannabis, yet the
highest usage. It's time to acknowledge the war on drugs is just not winnable."
The Home Affairs Committee is not
expected to complete its inquiry until fall 2002.
For more information, please
contact either Keith Stroup or Paul Armentano of NORML at (202) 483-5500.
Poll Shows Americans Strongly Oppose Jailing Minor Drug Offenders
Washington,
DC: Three out of four Americans oppose jailing minor drug offenders,
including those convicted of purchasing drugs, according to a recently released
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) poll. The results indicate that a
majority of Americans draw sharp distinctions between drug trafficking crimes
and other drug offenses.
"I'm sure that the nation's new czar
would be surprised to learn that, in reality, a majority of Americans have come
to realize we cannot incarcerate our way out of the drug problem," ACLU
President Nadine Strossen said. "Our findings shine a glaring spotlight on
the misdirection of the drug war the last two decades."
The study also found that more than
60 percent of the public support changing current laws so that fewer non-violent
offenses are punishable by prison. An equal percentage of respondents said
they opposed mandatory sentences for non-violent crimes.
"The results of this poll make it
clear that most Americans oppose arresting and jailing responsible marijuana
users," NORML Foundation Executive Director Allen St. Pierre said.
The ACLU's findings are similar to
those of a June ABC News poll that found roughly 3 to 1 support among the public
for state laws requiring treatment over jail time for first and second-time drug
offenders. A March Pew Research Center poll reported that 74 percent of
Americans believe the drug war is a failure.
The ACLU poll sampled opinions from
2000 random adults nationwide.
For more information, please
contact Allen St. Pierre, NORML Foundation Executive Director, at (202)
483-8751. A summary of the poll's findings appears online at:
http://www.aclu.org/features/f071901a.html.
Bush Not Enthusiastic About Hemp
Washington,
DC: President George Bush does not favor lifting Congress's embargo on
the domestic cultivation of industrial hemp for the purposes of fuel or fiber,
according to comments from his spokesman Ari Fleischer at a July 16 White House
press briefing.
Fleischer responded to the question:
"Does the President favor the legalization of industrial hemp?" by stating that
Bush has not made "any statements ... that would lend one to reach that
conclusion."
Presently, some 30 nations -
including Canada, the United Kingdom, France and Japan - license farmers to grow
hemp. Since 1996, twelve states have passed laws or resolutions endorsing
hemp, which belongs to the genus Cannabis sativa, but contains only negligible
amounts of THC.
For more information, please
contact Allen St. Pierre, Executive Director of The NORML Foundation, at (202)
483-8751.
- End -