The Minister for Crime, Policing and Fire (Chris Philp) I beg to
move, That the Committee has considered the draft Misuse of Drugs
Act 1971 (Amendment) Order 2024. It is a pleasure, as always, to
serve under your chairman-ship, Mr Hollobone. This draft order,
laid before Parliament on 27 November last year, proposes
amendments to schedule 2 to the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 to control
or ban 15 substances as class A drugs, four substances as class B
drugs, and one...Request free trial
The Minister for Crime, Policing and Fire ()
I beg to move,
That the Committee has considered the draft Misuse of Drugs Act
1971 (Amendment) Order 2024.
It is a pleasure, as always, to serve under your chairman-ship,
Mr Hollobone.
This draft order, laid before Parliament on 27 November last
year, proposes amendments to schedule 2 to the Misuse of Drugs
Act 1971 to control or ban 15 substances as class A drugs, four
substances as class B drugs, and one substance as a class C drug
under the Act.
Members will have seen the ruinous effect of fentanyl and other
synthetic opioids elsewhere in the world, particularly in the
United States where they devastate lives and communities. As part
of the Government’s continuing efforts to mitigate the threat of
synthetic opioids in the UK, this legislation will control 15
additional synthetic opioids as class A drugs under the 1971 Act.
This will include 14 nitazenes, some of which are even more
potent than fentanyl, as class A drugs under the 1971 Act,
following recommendations from the Advisory Council on the Misuse
of Drugs in its report of 18 July 2022 and addenda of 19 December
2022 and 6 October 2023. I want to put on the record my thanks to
Professor Owen Bowden-Jones, who chairs the ACMD, and all the
members for the work that they have done in this area and in
others.
Three of the synthetic opioids, isotonitazene, metoni-tazene and
brorphine—I can see the shadow Minister smiling; I look forward
to his pronunciations later—were controlled under schedule 1 to
the United Nations Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs 1961, to
which the UK is a signatory. Following this, the Government
commissioned the ACMD for its advice on the appropriate
classification and we are now following that advice.
The ACMD looked at some other substances as well.
Cumyl-PeGaClone, a synthetic cannabinoid receptor
agonist—SCRA—was added to schedule 2 to the United Nations
convention on psychotropic substances in April 2021. That will be
controlled as a class B drug under the Act. Many SCRAs are
currently class B under a generic definition in the 1971 Act.
However, owing to the structure of that particular substance, it
falls outside that definition, which is why we are adding it
here.
Also to be controlled as class B drugs under the 1971 Act by the
order are three stimulants—diphenidine, ephenidine and
methoxyphenidine. Again, this follows international control of
diphenidine under schedule 2 to the UN convention that I have
mentioned already. That happened in 2021, after which the
Government commissioned the ACMD. In its report of 25 May last
year the AMCD noted the involvement of those substances in a
number of drug-related deaths worldwide and recommended that we
control them, which we are now doing.
Finally, remimazolam, a benzodiazepine, will be controlled as a
class C drug under the Misuse of Drugs Act. Remimazolam is the
active ingredient in a product given marketing authorisation by
the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency, but the
ACMD recommended in December 2022 that it should be controlled as
a class C drug because of the potential harms that it can
cause.
According to the ACMD’s advice, all of the substances are
psychoactive and therefore may be subject to the offences under
the Psychoactive Substances Act 2016, which contains various
offences for the production, supply, possession with intent to
supply, and import or export of a psychoactive substance. The
control of those substances under the 1971 Act will make it an
offence to possess them and imposes higher penalties and stronger
enforcement provisions for the supply and production
offences.
Although many are caught under the PSA, the sanctions, including
for possession, are now much stronger. Those who supply or
produce a class A drug could face up to life imprisonment, an
unlimited fine, or both. Meanwhile, those found in unlawful
possession of a class A drug could face up to seven years in
prison, an unlimited fine or both. Members of the Committee will
see that the controls, under the 1971 Act, are much stronger.
One of the substances I have mentioned, remimazolam, has known
medicinal value and has been given a marketing authorisation by
the MHRA. It will therefore be placed in part 1 of schedule 4 to
the Misuse of Drugs Regulations 2001 by a statutory instrument
made under the negative procedure to make sure it can be used for
legitimate medicinal purposes. The other 19 substances will be
placed in schedule 1 to the 2001 regulations by that same
negative SI owing to their lack of known medicinal value. Those
substances, excluding remimazolam, will therefore be added to
part 1 of schedule 1 to the Misuse of Drugs (Designation)
(England, Wales and Scotland) Order 2015. Controlled drugs are
designated when the Secretary of State believes it is in the
public interest for production, supply and possession to be
wholly unlawful or unlawful except for research or special
purposes, or for medicinal use of the drug to be unlawful, except
under specific licence.
The drugs we are scheduling today under the 1971 Act all have
potential to cause enormous harm. We know that synthetic opioids
are powerfully addictive. They are very potent; often far more
than heroin, for example. We have seen the devastation synthetic
opioids have caused in the USA and are determined to avoid the
same thing happening here in the United Kingdom. Therefore, the
measures we take today in the order are just part of the work the
UK Government are doing to protect our citizens against the harm
that synthetic opioids can cause. On that basis, I commend the
order to the Committee.
The Chair
I remind Members that the debate may last until 4 pm.
2.37pm
(Nottingham North)
(Lab/Co-op)
Thank you, Mr Hollobone. I do not intend to detain the Committee
until 4 pm—although colleagues are encouraging me, so who
knows—but I have a few points I want to go through with the
Minister.
I am grateful to the Minister for his explanation. I will start
by saying that we support the changes. We all recognise the
devastating impact mentioned by the Minister that synthetic
opioids have had on communities in the United States. That
epidemic has seen incidences of overdoses rise dramatically, lots
of lives lost, families torn apart and entire communities riven
with the problems associated with their use. It is good news that
we have not experienced the crisis in that way, but sometimes we
are just behind rather than having avoided such challenges, and
so we need to be vigilant in acting where necessary to ensure
that the law keeps pace with developments.
I associate myself with the Minister’s comments regarding the
Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs and its fine work, both
generally and in this regard. We are grateful for that work; it
is helpful. However, might the Minister take the opportunity in
summing up to say, beyond his conversations with the ACMD, what
the Government’s views are of the picture of the development of
new synthetic opioids and the prevalence of their use in the UK?
We will have to monitor that. It is right to put them in their
classifications, but there will still be an illicit market for
them, and knowing what we can do about the intelligence would be
of interest to the Committee.
I turn to an important point about drug treatment services. It is
right that we have classifications for synthetic opioids, all of
which, and particularly class A, have profound possible legal
sanctions. It is right that those who manufacture, trade and
profit from synthetic opioids face significant penalties because
of the devastation they wreak. Can the Minister talk a little
about drug treatment services and whether there will be a need to
develop services in concert with those penalties to pick up need
as a result of the development of the use of synthetic opioids?
The Minister and I are currently engaged in the Criminal Justice
Bill and we talked a little about drug treatment services last
week or the week before—time merges into one on such Bills—and
the figure for drug treatment services is still about half of
what it was a decade ago while drug deaths have doubled. What
assessment has the Department made of that?
On a final point, when this order was debated in the other place,
the Government spokesperson referred to the Government’s drugs
strategy and the increased availability of naloxone nasal spray,
a life-saving heroin antidote. The Government have committed to
updating legislation to enable greater access to take-home
treatment for people who either are themselves or are close to
someone at risk of possible death by overdose. I have tabled a
new clause to the Criminal Justice Bill on this matter, which we
will probably debate on Tuesday. It is based on the Home Affairs
Committee’s recommendation that police officers in England and
Wales carry naloxone. In Scotland, they already do. I believe the
Government only partially accepted the recommendation. Given the
recognition in this order of the importance of opioids and the
risk of controlled substances, is it not now time to revisit that
recommendation, to save lives and mitigate some of the harm that
can be caused?
2.40pm
(South Holland and The Deepings)
(Con)
It is typical of the diligence of this Minister that he has
brought this instrument to the House. He is right to do so, for
he will know that it is vitally important, in the terms of the
1971 Act, that the regulatory body concerned has a dynamic
function. Like all diligent Members of this House, I have a broad
familiarity with the Act; he will have a more detailed one. It
was always envisaged that the ACMD would have a dynamic role, and
that becomes particularly important as drugs have been used for
spiking and for various recreational purposes in a way that could
not have been imagined back then in 1971, but was anticipated
structurally, in that this body was set up to do exactly what the
Minister has recommended today.
Knowing his diligence, I expect the Minister will have no trouble
dealing with my single query and my one suggestion. My query is
on enforcement. I note that he says that it will now be a
criminal offence to possess these drugs, with serious
consequences. Could he say a word about enforcement and how
police forces will be well informed and equipped to update their
understanding?
The suggestion is that following today he might let Committee
Members know of the terms of reference that govern the ACMD in
looking at these things, as I guess that we may well come back to
a similar Committee of this kind in times to come as new
substances become available, with the same malevolent
effects.
2.42pm
(Glasgow Central)
(SNP)
It is a pleasure to see you in the Chair, Mr Hollobone. I
apologise for my tardiness—as colleagues explained, I
inadvertently got stuck in a lift trying to get to Committee
today and I missed the beginning of the Minister’s statement.
I am pretty sceptical about these orders adding more dangerous
drugs to the already quite long list of dangerous drugs and about
the effect that will have. Adding drugs to a list certainly does
not prevent or deter people from taking them. The analysis of the
risk at paragraph 79 in the impact assessment from the Home
Office states:
“The analysis does not consider any deterrence effect in which
indivduals stop misusing the controlled drugs as a result of the
intervention. This is not included due to a lack of evidence on
the likelihood of a deterrence following drug control both across
all controlled drugs and the specific drugs controlled in this
legislation.”
I would be interested to hear from the Minister why he thinks
that adding these drugs to the list will stop people taking
drugs. The very nature of drugs is that they are quite moreish,
and people tend to keep taking them. That is the history of the
Misuse of Drugs Act.
I also reinforce the findings of the Home Affairs Committee
report, which asked the Government, among other things, to look
again at the Misuse of Drugs Act, which is a very outdated and
largely ineffective piece of legislation. I very much agree with
that point.
The hon. Member for Nottingham North mentioned the significance
of naloxone in tackling opioids and in reversing the effects of
opioid overdoses. That has been used to great effect in Scotland.
It is carried by the police, and I and my office staff have been
trained in how to administer it, not just the nasal form but the
injectable one. It is available in Scotland for people to have
training on. The Scottish drugs agencies help to make sure that
people can get that training in the community, which is really
important, given that drug addiction and overdoses are, sadly,
still too prevalent. I would encourage all Members to take up the
opportunity if it is available to them, because it is important
to be able to make that intervention and to save lives where we
can. I will not oppose the order, but I certainly remain
sceptical about the effect that it will actually have.
2.45pm
Let me briefly respond to the points that have been made. I
welcome the support for the order from both the shadow Minister
and the SNP spokesperson, who have said that they will not oppose
it. On the shadow Minister’s questions regarding the use of
synthetic opioids, it is a real concern. We have seen what has
happened in the USA. We have not seen widespread problems in the
UK; we have seen some issues, but nothing like the scale in the
US, and we would like to keep it that way. How will we do that?
One way is through very careful monitoring—for example, by
looking at post-mortem toxicology reports. Wastewater analysis is
another way. We are also significantly increasing surveillance at
the border to detect any attempts to import either synthetic
opioids or their precursor chemicals.
My right hon. Friend the Member for South Holland and The
Deepings asked about enforcement, and he is quite right to say
that the law is only as good as the enforcement that accompanies
it. We have had a number of conversations with the police to make
sure that they are aware of the systemic threat that synthetic
opioids pose, particularly nitazenes, including those being
banned today. I specifically discussed this issue with Richard
Lewis, who is the chief constable of Dyfed-Powys police and the
National Police Chiefs’ Council lead on drugs, to make sure that
he is fully appraised of the risk that synthetic opioids pose,
particularly nitazenes. I can assure my right hon. Friend that I
will continue to press the police to make sure that they enforce
hard against these drugs.
We need to have a zero-tolerance approach to all forms of illegal
drugs, and synthetic opioids are at the top of that list because
of the harm they cause. I therefore respectfully disagree with
the hon. Member for Glasgow Central on her suggestion that
banning drugs has no effect or is a foolish undertaking. Where
drugs are highly addictive, devastate lives and cause people to
die, it is right that Parliament legislates to ban them. I am
sure we will debate this issue at greater length at another time,
but we have seen some American cities essentially decriminalise
drugs and public drug consumption. They have then seen an
explosion in drug consumption, particularly of synthetic opioids,
but of other drugs as well. In fact, some of those same cities,
which are very often run by extreme liberal administrations, have
now begun to think again and look at reversing some of the
liberalisation that they instituted because they have seen the
effect it has had.
On the point about synthetic opioids, many charities are
concerned about the impact that the stymieing of the flow of
drugs from Afghanistan may have on the development of synthetic
opioids in Europe, because they do not need to be transported;
they can be made right here. That is a risk factor should the
supply of heroin into the UK be stopped as a result of the action
taken in Afghanistan. What assessment has the Minister made of
that risk?
We have assessed the risk. We are aware of the new Taliban policy
to ban opium production in Afghanistan and the consequent likely
reduction in the heroin supply into western Europe and North
America. It will take a while to filter through the supply
chain—it will not have an immediate effect—but we are aware of
the problem. The hon. Lady identifies one of the risks, which is
why staying ahead of synthetic opioid importation through
surveillance, border control and a zero-tolerance law enforcement
approach is particularly important—more so than it would
ordinarily be because of the substitution risk that she rightly
refers to.
My right hon. Friend the Member for South Holland and The
Deepings asked about the ACMD’s remit. The Home Office is able to
commission the ACMD to look at various matters. Whenever a matter
of concern arises, we commission ACMD to look at it, and monkey
dust is an example of that. A number of colleagues, including my
hon. Friends the Members for Stoke-on-Trent South () and for
Newcastle-under-Lyme, raised that issue, and we commissioned the
ACMD to take a look at it. We can take action whenever a new
harmful illegal substance pops up.
The final question relates to treatment. Although members of the
Committee will discern from my comments that I believe in having
a strong—indeed, a zero-tolerance—approach to enforcement,
treatment is also important. Naloxone should be used as routinely
as possible because, as Members know, it combats the effect of
opioid overdose. It is successful and effective at doing that,
but treatment is also important for getting people off drugs. We
have invested £532 million over three years in creating 55,000
extra treatment places, and we are tracking the uptake of those
places. I am encouraging the police to refer addicted people into
treatment in addition to prosecuting criminals, and I am
encouraging the courts to do the same thing. A combination of
strong enforcement and referrals to treatment can keep our
society free from drugs, and today’s order is an important part,
but only a part, of that fight.
Question put and agreed to.
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