Press Association - The UK Drug Policy Commission said money seized from drug dealers should be used to fund research
Millions of pounds seized from drug dealers should be
funnelled into a new independent researcher in a bid to tackle the country's
drug problems, campaigners have said. In a highly critical report, the UK Drug
Policy Commission (UKDPC) warned a lack of leadership and high turnover of
ministers and civil servants were hindering progress. A new body funded by up
to £10 million a year in cash raised through the confiscated assets of
drug-related crime is required to improve drug policy, the UKDPC said, while
politicians should establish a cross-party forum to decide where progress could
be made.
The 18-month study, titled How to make drug policy better,
comes after Prime Minister David Cameron ruled out a fundamental review of the
Government's approach to drugs. Mr Cameron dismissed calls from the cross-party
Home Affairs Select Committee to hold a wide-ranging Royal Commission to
consider alternative approaches, including legalisation. Discussing the process
for testing the effectiveness of policies, a senior political adviser told the
UKDPC: "Our impact assessment system is broken and needs to be completely
reformed."
The report, based on interviews with former home
secretaries, drugs ministers, senior civil servants and policy experts, warned
there is a lack of serious discussion about the aims of drug policy and options
are not adequately researched or tested. The UK also lacks evaluation of
existing and alternative policies, according to the research, while a rapid
succession of drugs ministers is harming efforts to improve policy. There have
been four drugs ministers and three Home Office civil servants with lead responsibility
for drugs since the 2010 election, the UKDPC said. UKDPC chief executive Roger
Howard said: "We have not been taking evidence seriously. As a result we
are spending billions of pounds a year tackling drug problems, without always
knowing what difference it makes. "We need a body that takes
responsibility for collecting and sharing evidence. Until we get serious about
this, we will continue to be driving blind with many of our drug policies. At
the moment, no-one can say that much of what we are doing in enforcement and
prevention offers value for money."
Source: Yahoo News
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