Pubdate: Wed, 05 Dec 2001
Source: Westender (CN BC)
Copyright: 2001 WestEnder
Contact:  http://www.westender.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1243
Column: Evil Brain
Author: Brian Peterson
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada)

PROOF THAT MEDICINAL-POT PROTESTS ARE JUST BEGINNING

I went to my first demonstration in a long time the other day. Lately I've 
been suffering from teargasaphobia and boot-in-the-face-itis. But with the 
anti-terrorism bills shamefully rammed through Parliament and now on their 
way to the Senate I figured I better fit a demo in quick before the power 
of police and prosecutors swelled to a grotesque size.

This demo, held on a cuttingly brisk Nov. 30 evening and attended by some 
100 citizens and assorted cops, called for amnesty for Canadians held in 
prison on marijuana-related charges, and those still facing harassment as 
they try to negotiate the shortcomings of the new Health Canada 
regulations. The Attorney-General's response was a succinct "No comment".

As I huddled around the warming coal of a complimentary joint, I reflected 
dismally on an earlier conversation with Jim Wakeford, a 57-year-old 
HIV-infected AIDS activist, busted on Nov. 9 for the fourth time this year 
on charges of trafficking.

Wakeford, now a resident of the Sunshine Coast, was diagnosed with AIDS 10 
years ago and was one of the first people granted a Section 66 medical 
exemption to grow, possess and use marijuana in limited amounts in 1999. 
Earlier in the week Wakeford had split up a pound of weed and tried to mail 
out 16 ounces of half-sativa, half-indica to personal friends and 
medicinal-users.

Post office employees notified the RCMP, who confiscated the marijuana. On 
Nov. 9, eight Gibsons RCMP officers raided Wakeford's home in Roberts Creek 
and destroyed all but the seven plants his medical exemption allows him, 
and confiscated most of his dried medical cannabis, his grow light and his 
computer. Wakeford said the owners of the house also faced threats their 
children could be removed.

Current regulations allow medicinal-users to possess only seven plants and 
30 grams of pot, which many feel is an inadequate supply.

Jim was still mightily burned when I talked to him. "They're hastening my 
death! I have lost all respect for Alan Rock and Anne McLellan. And I'm 
beginning to lose respect for the RCMP."

Wakeford, who smokes pot to stimulate appetite and calm the nausea induced 
by his legal medications, complains of added stress and weight loss since 
his arrest. He said he plans to apply to the courts to have his pot and 
grow light returned.

He maintains that he gives the marijuana away to impoverished sick people 
who have been frustrated by the current hoop-jumping exercise endorsed by 
Health Canada or don't have the means to grow or the cash to pay black 
market rates for the marijuana.

I got on the phone to Staff-Sgt. Ed Hill of the Gibsons RCMP for a polite 
but rather unhelpful conversation. He refused to discuss the ongoing 
investigation except to say that when a crime is brought to the attention 
of the RCMP, the public expects it to act.

I asked how giving away marijuana to sick people constituted trafficking 
and he said according to the statute it did. I asked whether it was 
customary to take an activist's computer in an investigation like this. He 
answered yes, if there's possible evidence of others involved in the crime 
on it.

He had no comment on whether the RCMP would be targeting Gibsons' recently 
opened Compassion Club, where Wakeford maintains pot is being sold for $220 
an ounce.

My other questions about the ethics of targeting the seriously ill for 
harassment were looking like a waste of a nickel so I hung up.

I was finding myself again of the same mind as Wakeford and many others who 
consider the new Health Canada regulations a right without remedy that does 
not allow for adequate legal access or supply.

Wakeford refuses to recognize the government regulations. It seems that the 
doctors who've been placed in the unwanted position of gatekeepers of the 
herb are being pressured not to comply with them either.

The Canadian Medical Protective Association, an insurance group 
representing about 95 per cent of Canadian doctors, has mailed out a 
three-page information letter to 60,000 doctors across the country. The 
letter warns of liability or professional misconduct complaints if they 
prescribe marijuana without "detailed knowledge" of the drug's risks and 
benefits as well as the appropriate dosage.

Secretary-treasurer and CEO of the CMPA, Dr. John Gray, said the directive 
means patients will likely "either have difficulty finding a doctor to 
complete the forms or difficulty accessing the appropriate specialists." 
Put that in your hooka and smoke it.
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MAP posted-by: Jackl