Pubdate: Wed, 07 Jun 2000 Source: Dominion, The (New Zealand) Copyright: 2000 The Dominion Contact: P O Box 1297, Wellington, New Zealand Fax: +64 4 474-0350 Website: http://www.inl.co.nz/wnl/dominion/index.html Author: NZPA MPS GET STEAMED UP ABOUT CANNABIS Labour and National traded insults yesterday after National rejected Health Minister Annette King's proposal for Parliament's health committee to review New Zealand's cannabis laws. Mrs King accused National leader Jenny Shipley of double standards after Mrs Shipley said her party would resist any moves to liberalise the law. National health spokesman Wyatt Creech responded by saying Mrs King was "gutless" in wanting the multi-party committee to carry out the review instead of the Government. It was up to the Government to come up with proposals for law changes, he said. "They've discovered that [reviewing the law] is not popular and they're trying to shove the responsibility on to someone else ... They're afraid of the reaction." Mrs King said she had spoken to Mr Creech informally some weeks ago and raised the possibility of the committee - which is made up of MPs from National, Labour, the Alliance and the Greens - carrying out the review. The committee would be able to review the law in a "sensible, parliamentary" way - "rather than trying to play party politics with an issue that's really serious". In the last term of Parliament, the committee, at the instigation of National MP Brian Neeson, held an inquiry into the health effects of cannabis and concluded that the law should be reviewed. Mrs Shipley pulled the plug on Mrs King's suggestion yesterday, saying the Government should put proposals to Parliament. "National's withdrawal from the review would mean the responsibility for proposing change falls squarely on the Labour, Alliance and Green politicians," she said. "I intend to campaign vigorously against any change that would signal liberalisation." Mrs King said Mrs Shipley had herself proposed a partial decriminalisation of cannabis laws only fortnight ago. Under Mrs Shipley's proposal, presented to a National Party conference, people caught with small amounts of cannabis would receive diversion on their first two offences if they were committed to giving up the drug. Mrs Shipley was trying to suggest that Labour had already made up its mind to decriminalise cannabis. "That's impossible. We don't know whether a review will tell us whether we ought to decriminalise. It may say no change ... may suggest change to the proposal she has suggested," Mrs King, said. Prime Minister Helen Clark has proposed a system of instant fines for possession of small amounts of cannabis, and the Green Party wants possession for personal use decriminalised. Neither Labour nor the Government officially supports decriminalisation. Mrs King said despite National's stance she would write to the health committee asking if it wanted to conduct the review. She said she would be appalled if National withdrew. If the committee declined her request, Mrs King would consider a ministerial review, a committee of experts or a review conducted by government officials. - --- MAP posted-by: greg