Pubdate: Fri, 13 Sep 2002
Source: Globe and Mail (Canada)
Page A7
Copyright: 2002, The Globe and Mail Company
Contact:  http://www.globeandmail.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168
Author: Graeme Smith

CANADA'S POT POLICY UNDER FIRE FROM U.S.

DETROIT -- Canada's marijuana policy is flawed by a lack of information and 
outright lies, according to the highest-ranking drug official in the United 
States.

John Walters, director of U.S. national drug-control policy, sharply 
criticized Ottawa yesterday for allowing ill people to smoke pot and for 
considering relaxed antimarijuana laws.

Mr. Walters said at a Detroit news conference that Canada has done 
insufficient research, so it cannot justify liberalizing its cannabis policy.

"I asked the ministers in Canada when I was there: What do you estimate to 
be the level of use in Canada, and what are the trends? What do you 
estimate to be the level of dependency and the need for treatment and the 
trends?

"The answer is that they don't know. They don't have surveys. They do not 
have the data," Mr. Walters said.

"In our view of working policy, you don't make a major step that involves 
these kinds of dangers without first telling the people what the danger is, 
what the trends are and what the problems are."

Mr. Walters suggested that policymakers in Canada are naive to be persuaded 
of marijuana's medical benefits.

"The claim that medical marijuana is an efficacious medicine is a lie.

"It is used by people who want to legalize marijuana, cynically."

He acknowledged that the United States is considering tighter border 
security -- recently strengthened to handle terrorist threats -- if Canada 
relaxes its antimarijuana laws.

"What happens in Canada as a sovereign nation -- as long as it stays in 
Canada -- is Canada's business," Mr. Walters said.

"The problem today is that Canadian production of high-potency marijuana in 
British Columbia is a major source of marijuana [in the United States] . . 
. and it's spreading. Just like cocaine, shipped up from Mexico."

Mr. Walters repeatedly said that the U.S. prohibition on marijuana is based 
on scientific evidence, and he attacked studies that suggest cannabis can 
relieve symptoms of some illnesses.

He emphasized that U.S. scientists have done more research into the effects 
of the drug than have their colleagues in Canada.

"We have the most powerful, successful and sophisticated medical 
institutions in the history of humankind."

The news conference was Mr. Walters's only public appearance as he meets 
with law-enforcement officials, government leaders and drug-prevention and 
treatment advocates from both sides of the border.
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