APPG Co-Chairs welcome ‘long overdue’ UN vote to remove medical cannabis from dangerous drug category

The All-Party Parliamentary Group for Drug Policy Reform, co-chaired by Tory MP Crispin Blunt, Labour MP Jeff Smith, and Crossbench Peer Baroness Meacher, has welcomed today’s United Nations vote to remove cannabis from Schedule IV of the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs.

This morning’s votes by the Commission for Narcotic Drugs considered a series of recommendations from a scientific committee of the World Health Organisation on changing the status of cannabis and its derivatives under international law. Until now, cannabis had been classified as ‘particularly liable to produce ill-effects and have little or no therapeutic use.’.

Today’s vote to reschedule it passed by 27 votes to 25, with one abstention. The UK voted in favour.

While national governments still have the ultimate power to decide how to legislate on cannabis in their country, most look to international conventions for guidance. The APPG for Drug Policy Reform believe this move will strengthen the international basis for ensuring patients can access cannabis-based medicines for a variety of conditions.

The group of politicians have, however, expressed concern that this reform goes nowhere near far enough – the recreational use of cannabis is treated as harshly in international schedules as drugs like heroin and cocaine, despite clear evidence of its much lower risks, and the fact that many countries have already introduced domestic legislation legalising its supply and consumption.

WHO did not recommend cannabis’s removal from Schedule 1 of the convention despite their critical review clearly demonstrating that cannabis was less harmful than heroin and cocaine. The APPG argue that this review’s findings should have meant that cannabis was moved to the less stringent schedule II, or removed from control altogether.

Jeff Smith MP said:

“Today’s vote is welcome news for the millions around the world – including at least a million people in the UK – who could benefit from cannabis-based medicine to treat their health conditions. When you look at the ever-growing evidence base and demand for cannabis-based medicinal products, it’s clear that the UN’s move is long overdue.

“This acknowledgement by the international community of the therapeutic value of cannabis should push the Government to urgently address the current systemic failures preventing widespread access to medical cannabis – particularly NHS access – here in the UK, which continue to occur despite the change in the law in 2018.”

Crispin Blunt MP said:

“Today’s vote on medical cannabis is a welcome step and I commend the UK government on its vote for sensible, evidence-based reform. There is much further to go however.

“The WHO’s review revisited cannabis scheduling decisions made in the 1950s, which were driven by prevailing racist and colonial attitudes, and not based on scientific evaluations. After today’s vote most of this analysis has been rejected as governments have preferred to pursue strict control measures despite the evidence mounting on the negative impacts on health, justice and human rights.

“The government should listen to the evidence and pave the way not only for better access to medical cannabis for millions of patients across the world, but draw on our strength in research and bioscience and support the development of a nascent yet burgeoning industry with its associated jobs and investment – an industry estimated to balloon to over £2.2bn in 2024, with the right support.”