Pubdate: Wed, 18 Dec 2002 Source: Goldstream Gazette (CN BC) Copyright: 2002 Goldstream Gazette Contact: http://www.goldstreamgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1291 Author: Keith Norbury MP PRAISES POT PROPOSAL Local Canadian Alliance Party MP Keith Martin sounds nothing like an opposition member in his praise for the governing Liberal Party's promise last week to decriminalize Canada's marijuana laws. In an telephone interview from Ottawa Thursday, Martin said the proposal covers just what he had sought in a private member's bill last year. When the Liberals used a procedural maneuver to sidetrack that bill to parliamentary committee on drug use, Martin breached protocal by grabbing the Mace, an act he later had to apologize for. Last week, though, Martin sounded like someone whose efforts had been vindicated. "It was virtually all of what I asked for, their proposal when I went in front of the committee (on illicit drug use) as a witness," Martin said of the proposals to decriminalize Canada's marijuana law. Nevertheless, he sees this as stage one in a lengthy process for dealing more effectively with substance abuse. "My objective in putting the fill(sic) forward was actually to open up the debate on substance abuse and how we can employ a plan to will(sic) reduce drug use, reduce harm and reduce crime." A medical doctor by profession, the MP for Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca makes it clear he is not an advocate for marijuana use, or any drug use for that matter. "I'll make it very clear. I'm against the use of marijuana. It's cancer causing; it damages people's brains," Martin said. The problem is that marijuana prohibition hasn't controlled its use and has had the opposite effect. That's because resources spent on the war on drugs haven't gone to educational and treatment programs. Instead, it has created an environment for organized crime to operate; and those criminals have ratcheted up the price of the product. The proposal calls for decriminalization of possession and cultivation of up to 30 grams of marijuana, enough to roll 40 pinners or 25 fatties. Instead of being convicted of a criminal offence for possession, those caught with such small amounts of pot would be issued the equivalent of a traffic ticket. Martin estimates that such decriminalization will save the Canadian government $100 million a year, money that would then be available for cracking down on organized crime. Martin admitted that police in B.C. rarely pursue cases of simple possession at present, but such isn't the case in other parts of the country. "I've seen it up close and personal for 14 years. Any professional, most professionals will tell you that what we are doing now doesn't work," Martin said. He cautions, though, that any further move in the direction of legalization will require getting the United States to liberalize its marijuana laws. Otherwise Canada will become a haven for organized crime to have ready access to that huge U.S. market. "The liberalization in Canada in isolation to the Americans will only make matters worse," Martin said. Consequently, he said, step 2 is "go to the Americans and say, 'Your War on Drugs has been, always is, and always will be a failure.' It has increased the use, the hard-time use of drugs." Indeed, Martin sees the only downside to the proposed decriminalization initiative is that the Americans will make a fuss and the Liberals might not stand up to them. Martin points to more liberal drug laws in Europe, where drug use and crime rates are lower, as evidence that a more liberal approach works better. Eventually, he foresees the day when marijuana will be treated in a similar legal context to alcohol and tobacco, two drugs he says are seen more harmful. Maintaining the status quo, however, is precisely what criminals and terrorists want because they can profit from the increased prices a black market gives drugs, he said. Martin said he has the governments of 17 countries in the Americas willing to endorse his five-point plan. They include a leader of Colombia, a country where 30,000 murders a year are attributed to the drug trade, he said. - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFlorida)