Pubdate: Fri, 06 Sep 2002 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2002 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Author: Les Whittington, Ottawa Bureau Related: What's Up In Canada, Eh? / by Matthew Elrod http://www.drugsense.org/dsw/2002/ds02.n266.html#sec5 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) LIBERALIZE LAWS ON POT: CAUCHON Justice Minister Interested in Decriminalization OTTAWA -- Canada's pot laws make no sense and should be liberalized, says Justice Minister Martin Cauchon. And Cauchon suggested yesterday he wants to decriminalize marijuana use next year, although he dismissed a Senate committee recommendation that marijuana be made legally available like alcohol. "The legislation ... actually is a sort of disconnect with Canadian reality," he said before a meeting. "To keep it the way it is now doesn't make any sense to me in the year 2002." Cauchon expressed interest in the lesser step of decriminalization, making possession of small amounts of cannabis a ticketing offence rather than a crime punishable in jail. "It probably would be feasible as a first step," he said of decriminalization. "I feel that there is strong support." Cauchon told reporters that first he wants to see the November report of a special Commons committee on the non-medical use of drugs. After that, he will move ahead quickly with a new policy, probably at the beginning of next year. Liberal MP Paddy Torsney, chair of the 15-member Commons committee, said there is no possibility it will recommend legalization of pot. But the committee, which has heard pro and con arguments from the public, police and others, has yet to decide whether to favour decriminalization. Cauchon said outright legalization of pot -- which would allow for the open sale of the drug -- is not feasible because Canada has signed a number of international treaties outlawing various drugs. "The notion of legalizing marijuana is just not possible from an international point of view," he said. Cauchon said the U.S. has not tried to contact him to influence Canada's position. Asked if he would be swayed by the U.S.'s anti-marijuana stance, he said, "I'll do what's good for Canadian society." On Wednesday, a committee of eight senators recommended legal reforms that would allow anyone over 16 to smoke marijuana. The committee said recreational use of pot is less harmful than alcohol or tobacco and should not be subjected to criminal sanction. Canadian Alliance Leader Stephen Harper says he'd be more worried about his kids abusing marijuana than alcohol, The Star's Richard Brennan reports. Harper, a father of two, who is attending a three-day caucus retreat in Barrie, said the committee has gone too far in its recommendations. "The Senate report really quite distresses me. It's not simply that I think the recommendations are fairly radical, but I think they almost get to the point or border on almost advocating the use of marijuana," he said. "As a parent, I simply don't share the view that alcohol is more harmful than marijuana ... I would be a lot more concerned about my kids abusing pot than abusing alcohol," said Harper, whose children are 3 and 5. But Dr. Patrick Smith, vice-president of clinical programs at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health and head of the addiction psychiatry program at the University if Toronto, countered that there is "nothing to suggest that alcohol is less harmful than marijuana." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake