Pubdate: Tue, 23 Sep 2003 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 2003 The Age Company Ltd Contact: http://www.theage.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5 Author: Australian Associated Press SWISS TO CLEAR HAZE OVER POT PLANS James started smoking cannabis when he was 12, insisting that it was "normal" among all his friends. Now 14, he's growing his own marijuana plants - his mother discovered them by the gladioli - and has promised to work for better school grades if he's allowed to keep them. "What can I do?" agonizes his mother, Liz. "If I let him grow it at least he will have his own supply. If he has to go and buy it, then he risks meeting older people selling Ecstasy and other nasty pills. And if I don't let him have any money, he will find ways of getting some," she frets, asking that the family name not be used. James is among a growing number of Swiss teenagers regularly smoking joints. A study earlier this year by the Swiss Institute for Prevention of Alcoholism and Drug Abuse found that 30 per cent of teachers had 14- to 15 year-old pupils who were stoned and that 40 per cent of girls and 50 per cent of boys ages 15 to 16 had smoked marijuana. Concern about young potheads has inflamed passions ahead of a parliamentary debate starting Wednesday on government proposals to decriminalize use of cannabis and - under certain circumstances - sale and production. The move is part of a wider revision of Swiss narcotics laws that also would provide permanent legal footing to the state's provision of heroin to chronic addicts. The nine-year-old heroin program, authorized to last until 2009, allows around 1,300 hardened addicts to shoot up at approved centres with government-provided heroin. The annual cost of 11 million to 14.5 million Swiss francs (US$8 million-US$10.5 million) is covered by health insurance on the grounds that addiction is an illness rather than a crime. Although at first controversial - the United States and the U.N. narcotics board remain critical - the program has won recognition at home and abroad for cutting the crime and misery associated with addiction. This has been accompanied by a spectacular fall in overdose-related fatalities. Last year, reported deaths fell to a 16-year low of 167, down 15.2 per cent from 2001 and just under half the 1994 peak of 399. The number of addicts has remained stable at around 30,000. "The whole debate about heroin has become much more reasonable because the good experiences with the program calmed people's fears," says Felix Gutzwiller, a professor at Zurich University's Institute for Social and Preventive Medicine and a leading proponent of a liberal drug policy. "By contrast, people are now very nervous and emotional about decriminalizing cannabis," he says. An anticipated shift to the right in the Oct. 19 national elections has brought a conservative tone to the cannabis debate. Gutzwiller said he fears the lower house of the Swiss parliament will throw out the proposed new law, which was approved by the upper house in December 2001. The government argues that at least 500,000 people out of a population of 7 million are occasional or regular users and that police resources are too stretched to enforce restrictive and outdated laws. The government's Youth Commission on Monday also spoke out in favour of decriminalization, saying that could focus more attention on prevention. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake