Pubdate: Tue, 09 May 2000 Source: South China Morning Post (Hong Kong) Copyright: 2000 South China Morning Post Publishers Limited. Contact: http://www.scmp.com/ Author: Stanley Oziewicz, In Toronto OTTAWA APPEALS FOR CANNABIS SUPPLIES The Canadian Government is asking individuals or firms to supply it with a steady crop of high-grade cannabis for clinical trials of the drug's medical value, when in most cases cannabis is illegal to use in Canada and not approved for medicinal use by any other country. "I think we're all kind of new at this," said a government spokesman, acknowledging that Ottawa was moving into uncharted waters - the Government did not usually ask its citizens to produce illegal drugs. The Health Minister, Allan Rock, said he wanted bidders on a five-year, C$5 million (HK$26 million) contract to set up a domestic cannabis-growing operation. The winner would be responsible for maintaining quality control, storage and distribution to eligible recipients and would be required to maintain strict security at his cannabis farm. Mr Rock's action follows two court rulings, one last year that said an Aids patient could use cannabis to relieve pain and to stimulate appetite, and one in 1997 that gave a Toronto epileptic the right to use the drug. So far the Government has given about 40 Canadians an exemption to the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act to allow them to legally use cannabis. But some have complained that they are unable to secure a legal source of the substance. Mr Rock said the Government's goal was to establish a source of quality, standardised, affordable, research-grade cannabis. Existing growers - many, particularly on Canada's west coast, have big clandestine hydroponic pot gardens - would presumably be ineligible to bid. "If you are growing it already you are growing it illegally," said a government spokesman. Mr Rock has made a personal admission to having smoked cannabis on occasion, and even to having inhaled it. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea