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Tag: england

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London Mayor Launches Commission To Examine Cannabis Policy

Cannabis reform is sweeping the European continent, with at least one country now a legal jurisdiction for adult use. Late last year Malta became the first country in Europe to pass an adult-use legalization measure.

Italy was on track to possibly legalize cannabis this year after activists gathered and submitted over 630,000 signatures in an attempt to put legalization in front of voters. Unfortunately, even though the effort proved to have gathered enough valid signatures Italy’s government stopped the effort in its tracks, claiming that it was unconstitutional to let it proceed.

Cannabis legalization pilot programs are starting to spread across Europe. Copenhagen already has a program underway and the pilot program is set to expand across Denmark as more jurisdictions sign up. Switzerland is launching its first pilot program site in Basel this summer, and hopefully by 2023, the Netherlands will do the same.

Germany’s governing coalition previously announced plans to legalize cannabis in the near future, and last week Germany’s Health Minister announced that the timeline for legalization would be sped up with legalization possibly coming as soon as this summer.

In the midst of all of the momentum for cannabis reform on the continent one country that has moved almost as slow as any other nation is the United Kingdom. The UK’s medical cannabis program is extremely limited and has only helped a minor fraction of the number of suffering patients that exist in the UK. Recreational cannabis possession and use remain prohibited.

London’s Mayor, Sadiq Khan, announced this week that a commission will be launched to explore, among other things, cannabis policy reform. Per The Guardian:

Sadiq Khan has announced a commission to examine the effectiveness of the UK’s drug laws, with a particular focus on those governing cannabis.

The London drugs commission, to be chaired by Lord Charlie Falconer QC, a former lord chancellor and justice secretary, was one of Khan’s manifesto pledges in his re-election bid last year.

The mayor of London’s office said a panel of independent experts in criminal justice, public health, politics, community relations and academia will be assembled to consider evidence from around the world on the outcomes of various drug policies.

The announcement was made while Khan was in Los Angeles where he toured a cannabis cultivation facility. The announcement of the commission yielded swift pushback from the Home Secretary of the United Kingdom Priti Patel. Per The Times:

The home secretary has criticised the mayor of London after he set up a commission to consider the decriminalisation of cannabis.

Priti Patel told Sadiq Kahn that he “has no powers to legalise drugs”.

“Sadiq Khan’s time would be better spent focusing on knife and drug crime in London. The mayor has no powers to legalise drugs. They ruin communities, tear apart families and destroy lives,” Patel said in a tweet.

For starters, the War on Drugs ruins communities, tears apart families, and destroys lives. That is a fact. It is also a fact that the War on Drugs has failed, both in the United Kingdom and beyond. Patel’s tweet obviously disregards those facts.

Secondly, as I understand it, what Khan has proposed is essentially a fact-finding commission, not a commission that will actually seek to change policies. I suppose that it could evolve to a point where that is being pursued, however, that does not appear to be the case right now.

What does appear to be the case, at least in my opinion, is that Patel and other like-minded officials are probably scared of what the commission will potentially find and publish. It’s much easier for Patel and others to peddle reefer madness rhetoric without the existence of a commission like the one that Khan is launching.

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London Mayor Calls For Changes To Cannabis Enforcement Practices

In most developed countries people have a basic set of rights. Those basic rights could be the result of legislation, the nation’s constitutional provisions, or court decisions. However they were created, basic rights are essential to citizens of every nation and they should be universally accepted and protected worldwide.

Unfortunately, cannabis prohibition has served as a tool to get around many of those basic legal rights. Once a law enforcement official determines that cannabis may be present, that’s all it takes for many basic legal protections to be tossed aside. Keep in mind that cannabis doesn’t actually have to be present – just the allegation thereof.

It’s a tactic that is employed by law enforcement all over the globe, including in London where a horrific scenario unfolded recently in which law enforcement searched a teenage girl in a very violating manner, all in an attempt to find the cannabis that they claimed the teenager was in possession of. The details of the search are graphic, and readers should be cautious when researching it.

I am hopeful that the victim that was subjected to the police brutality seeks and receives justice in some manner, although it will never be enough to make up for what they were subjected to. It’s a traumatic experience that I assume will negatively impact them the rest of their life, and that is unacceptable. The public outcry regarding the situation has resulted in London’s Mayor calling for changes to cannabis enforcement. Per excerpts from London World:

Sadiq Khan has demanded the Met Police bring in stricter controls over stop and search policing when the “smell of cannabis” is the sole grounds for the intervention.

The London mayor has released his plan for policing in the capital over the next three years.

The mayor said his priorities were reducing and preventing violent crime; rebuilding trust and confidence in the police; supporting victims; and protecting people from criminal exploitation.

The plan also includes “stricter oversight and scrutiny of the ‘smell of cannabis’ used as sole grounds for stop and search”, as well as “developing community-led training for officers”.

The mayor’s plan is obviously something, but it clearly doesn’t go far enough. Training officers is not enough. Providing “stricter oversight” is not enough. The only thing that will prevent this from happening again is to end cannabis prohibition.

Obviously, the Mayor of London alone cannot end cannabis prohibition in England. However, they can champion the issue wholeheartedly and be a major voice calling for a complete end to cannabis prohibition in England and beyond.

It’s unfortunate that this latest example of the horrors of cannabis prohibition occurred at all. Hopefully the public outcry doesn’t subside and the citizens of London and beyond keep the pressure on lawmakers to introduce, pass, and implement sensible cannabis policies.

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