Pubdate: Fri, 06 Sep 2002 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2002 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Jennifer Campbell, The Ottawa Citizen Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) SENATOR BACK-PEDALS ON MARIJUANA A Liberal Senator has thrown the Senate's unanimous call for the legalization of marijuana into doubt, saying she only supports the decriminalization of the drug. "I wasn't at the last meeting and I don't agree," Shirley Maheu said last night. "I don't feel that we've come to a consensus that we ought to legalize marijuana." Ms. Maheu, a Liberal from Montreal, wasn't at the committee's final meeting where members voted on the 600-page report, and she doesn't feel she should have been lumped in as supporting legalization. That Ms. Maheu doesn't agree with legalization was news to committee chairman Pierre Claude Nolin. "What?" he asked. "She received the report, she read the report. No, no, no, she cannot say that." Mr. Nolin said his Senate colleague is probably back-pedalling because she's afraid her former constituents in Montreal will get upset. "This is troubling," he said. "She knows exactly what we were doing. I think she's probably afraid of the turmoil." Mr. Nolin admitted Ms. Maheu was not at the meeting where a vote was held, but insisted she understood what was going on. "She received copies of all the written material," he said. "It was sent to her and she reviewed it. I spoke to her many times. She was part of our discussions. She knew that we were taking the vote that day. She said, 'Unfortunately I cannot be there, but don't worry.' " Meanwhile, Ms. Maheu insists "senator Nolin never used the word legalization with me." For her part, she admitted that if she wanted to formally dissent, she should have written a dissenting report. But, she said, the timing was difficult for her as she's been on vacation. "It was the timing and we don't have staff in the field," she said. "Last week, I was in Vietnam - we did a symposium with female MPs over there - and I come back and get hit with this." Ms. Maheu said she objects to the idea of 16-year-olds having legal access to marijuana. She also doesn't agree with the statement that it's less harmful than alcohol. "None of this has been absolutely proven," she argued. "And if we don't want people to smoke, why are we going to give 16-year-olds permission to smoke marijuana? I'd hate to be a mother of a 16-year-old reading this report and seeing that there's a chance the government's going to let my child smoke marijuana." Last night, she was trying to reach the other committee members to find out if they were at the meeting and if they supported the report. "I don't know how many were there, but I'm going to find out," she said. "There's a big difference between two saying we were unanimous and three or five not being there." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake