Clegg in drug law election pledge

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 04 Maret 2015 | 21.24

4 March 2015 Last updated at 11:15

The Liberal Democrats' manifesto will include a pledge to hand drugs policy from the Home Office to the Department of Health, Nick Clegg is to say.

His party would also shift resources away from prosecuting drug users.

Mr Clegg's comments are expected at a joint appearance with Virgin founder Sir Richard Branson, who has long called for reforms to the drug laws.

The two men said the UK seemed "oblivious" to the "tectonic shift" in the West on drugs policy.

Downing Street has previously insisted that the current drugs strategy is working, saying drug use in the UK was "plummeting" as a result of existing policy.

'Ludicrous situation'

The Lib Dems have long argued for changes to Britain's drug laws. At his party conference in October, Mr Clegg described the current approach as "idiotic".

The deputy prime minister will renew his attack on the current drugs policy in a speech in London alongside Sir Richard later today.

He will pledge to end the "nonsense" of jailing people for possessing small amount of drugs for their personal use, and say young people should not be penalised in later life because of a criminal record.

"If this was your child and you found those drugs would you go to a doctor or police officer to help them? I think nearly all of us would call the health expert," he will say.

"And, in the same way, I just don't think it is right for us as a society to write off these young people who haven't hurt anyone else, just made the wrong choice, so early.

"We need to put an end to this ludicrous situation. Our focus should be on getting them the help they need, not punishment, so they can go on to realise their ambitions and make a positive contribution to society."

The Liberal Democrats say they would develop "diversionary programmes" to take drug users out of the criminal justice system.

Coalition row

In a joint newspaper article, Mr Clegg and Sir Richard said the global war on drugs had been an "abject failure", with criminals making "unimaginable levels of profit" from the illegal market.

They called for British pilots of the approach taken in Portugal, where possession of drugs was turned into an "administrative offence", sending those caught with drugs for personal use to a "dissuasion board" rather than facing prosecution.

"The Portuguese system works, and on an issue as important as this, where lives are at stake, governments cannot afford to ignore the evidence," they added.

The findings of a Home Office report, commissioned by the Lib Dems to compare drugs policies in different countries, prompted a row at the top of the coalition last year, with the Lib Dems accusing the Conservatives of "suppressing" the report's release.

Norman Baker, a former Lib Dem Home Office minister, said the report should end "mindless rhetoric" on drugs policy but Prime Minister David Cameron said the research did not offer "specific conclusions" and that he did not "believe in" decriminalising drugs.


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