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News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Web: Ecstasy 'Downgrade' Welcomed By MP
Title:UK: Web: Ecstasy 'Downgrade' Welcomed By MP
Published On:2002-05-19
Source:BBC News (UK Web)
Fetched On:2008-01-23 07:17:03
ECSTASY 'DOWNGRADE' WELCOMED BY MP

Reports that senior MPs will call for ecstasy to be downgraded to a soft
drug have been welcomed by a Labour backbencher who has made it his
personal mission to get cannabis decriminalised.

Paul Flynn said the move would end the "ridiculous" anomaly of ecstasy
being classed as the same as "more addictive" drugs such as heroin and cocaine.

In its report on drugs, to be published on Wednesday, the Commons home
affairs select committee is expected to call for class A drug ecstasy to be
downgraded to class B - the same category as cannabis and amphetamines.

But the plan has provoked anger from the parents of Leah Betts, who died on
her 18th birthday in 1995 after taking ecstasy.

Shadow home secretary Oliver Letwin also opposes the reclassification,
stressing: "This drug can kill."

'Intelligent Solutions'

However, Mr Flynn, who has campaigned for years to get the laws on cannabis
liberalised, said he thought the measure was "very sensible".

He told BBC News Online: "At the moment, classifying ecstasy with heroin
and cocaine is seen to be ridiculous.

"It is part of the reason why the law lacks respect from the young who feel
it is not as addictive and dangerous as heroin.

"I have advocated this for many years. It will cut drug crime.

"I think we are over the 30 years of answering every problem with so-called
tough penalties. We are now starting to go towards intelligent solutions."

Declassifying ecstasy would reduce the maximum penalty for supplying the
drug from a life jail sentence to just 14 years.

But Mr Betts, a former Metropolitan police officer, told The Sunday
Telegraph: "This will send out all the wrong signals to young people that
ecstasy is a safe drug when even the government's own figures shows it
kills up to 50 people every year.

'Dangerous Move'

"Ecstasy can kill and in America, it is becoming known as 'suicide Tuesday'
because so many people kill themselves as they come off the drug after the
weekend.

"It will be a very dangerous move to reclassify ecstasy. We will see more
young people in psychiatric wards and ruined for life."

But former Cabinet Minister Mo Mowlam, an advocate of liberalisation who
has admitted smoking cannabis as a student, says the committee's proposed
"half-way measures achieve nothing".

She said ministers should have the "guts to go the whole way" and legalise
ecstasy and cannabis.

"The ecstasy move, to bring it down a class, what does that do? It makes it
more available," she told BBC's Breakfast with Frost.

"But it doesn't deal with the underlying problems of making sure it's
clean, making sure that people know how much and that water is available
and how much water to drink."

Baroness Walmsley welcomed the committee's proposals, which she described
as "almost a carbon copy" of her Lib Dem working group's investigation into
the UK's "failing" drugs policy.

"We really do need more medical evidence about ecstasy before going any
further than reclassifying it from A to B," she said.

"Young people know that alcohol and tobacco are more dangerous than
cannabis, but classing ecstasy alongside heroin and crack cocaine brings
drugs education into disrepute."

'Heroin Prescription'

But a committee member, was reported to have told the Telegraph
anonymously: "The police must concentrate on the drugs that do the most
serious harm, such as heroin and cocaine.

"Seizing this drug and cracking down on the dealers is the most important
job that we can do.

"Ecstasy will remain illegal, but we have to face facts, about half a
million people take ecstasy every week in Britain, so the current law isn't
working."

The committee is reported to be supporting Home Secretary David Blunkett's
call for more addicts to be prescribed heroin.

Mr Blunkett believes more people dependent on drugs should get access to
them on prescription provided they agree to seek treatment.

NHS

The MPs will also reportedly propose the use of controversial "safe
injecting areas", such as those seen in some continental countries, the
paper says.

A Home Office spokeswoman told the newspaper that there was nothing new in
proposals to make greater use of diamorphine - so-called medical heroin.

She said: "The home secretary's position has not changed since October when
he said that doctors should prescribe more drugs if that is a way to bring
addicts in for treatment."

A Department of Health spokesman said that "heroin is not available on the
NHS" and stressed there were no plans to make it available.

"Diamorphine is currently available to a very small number of drug users
prescribed by specialist GPs and we don't have any plans to change that,"
he said.
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