Influx of drug users feared over cannabis cafe plans
http://globalarchive.ft.com/globalarchive/article.html?id=011126009921&query=sclerosis
Nov 26, 2001
ANTI-drugs campaigners last night
warned of an influx of users to Scotland if cannabis cafes are allowed,
as it emerged that the man behind the Trainspotting publishing company
plans to open an outlet in Edinburgh.
Kevin Williamson, of Rebel Inc, claimed
he intends to open Scotland's first Amsterdam-style cafe in the city next
May, and that he wants to open dialogue with Lothian and Borders Police
on the matter.
Mr Williamson, who steered Irvine
Welsh's drugs novel to international success, said he hopes the cafe would
sell pre-rolled joints for medical and recreational use.
He cited the ill-fated trial of tolerance
zones for prostitutes as an example of Edinburgh's liberal attitude towards
crimes which take up valuable police time, but are considered relatively
minor.
A police spokesman said yesterday
he was unaware of the plans and declined to comment, although another Scots
force pointed out last week that the move would be illegal when pro-cannabis
campaigners said they planned to open a cafe in Dundee at some stage.
The move comes after David Blunkett,
the home secretary, last month announced the reclassification of cannabis
from a class B to a class C drug, putting it on par with tranquillisers
and anabolic steroids.
It also follows the arrests last
week of alleged users in Stockport, Greater Manchester, after the UK's
first cannabis cafe was opened there in September.
Alistair Ramsay, director of Scotland
Against Drugs, said he was convinced that if cannabis cafes were allowed
it would lead to an influx of users to Scotland.
He said: ''The Dutch experience does
not give the answers that so many of those who propose the adoption of
cannabis cafes in Scotland believe will.
''In Holland, the Dutch people are
very concerned that the majority of people using the cannabis cafes are
not Dutch. What these have become are magnets for people to come into the
country to smoke cannabis.
''If we introduce cannabis cafes
in Scotland, we would then become a magnet for outsiders to come into the
country and smoke their cannabis and I don't believe the ordinary people
of Scotland would want that.''
Mr Williamson said he believed public
opinion now favours more relaxation of the law, with more plans to open
separate cafes in Brighton and Worthing.
''After years of taking part in countless
marches, debates and meetings, writing articles, papers and books on the
subject, and despairing at the ignorance and irrationality of the opposition
to legalisation of cannabis, prohibition is about to collapse under the
weight of its own unworkability,'' he was reported as saying.
He described current policy as ''insane'',
adding: ''In some countries, such as Belgium and Switzerland, it is now
legal to grow your own. Other countries, such as Luxembourg, are moving
in this direction, with still others, such as Germany, already implementing
radical changes in drug policy in some regions.
''The idea that cannabis is a relatively
harmless and pleasurable substance, which can do medical and social good,
is becoming accepted.''
It was suggested that the Dundee
cafe would offer cut-price ''medi-weed'' for people with medical conditions
such as multiple sclerosis, while also catering for recreational users.
However, a Tayside Police spokesman
said: ''As the law stands, anyone doing this in Scotland would be acting
illegally.''
The situation in Stockport took a
new turn yesterday when police questioned 12 cannabis campaigners after
they allegedly smoked the drug outside a police station. They were among
around 30 demonstrators gathered outside Stockport police station protesting
about a second raid on Britain's first cannabis cafe last Tuesday..
A Greater Manchester Police spokesman
said around 30 people congregated outside the police station for what was
described as a ''peaceful protest''. Officers are understood to have moved
in when 12 demonstrators each lit up a joint.
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