Pubdate: Thu, 25 Sep 2003 Source: Argosy, The (CN NK Edu) Copyright: 2003 Argosy Publications, Inc. Contact: http://argosy.mta.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2655 DATE-RAPE DRUG AWARENESS MP LEADS INITIATIVE Earlier this week, members of the Mount Allison Canadian Alliance Campus Club began handing out pamphlets and organizing petitions to raise awareness of the dangers of date-rape drugs on university campuses throughout Canada. The efforts are part of a Canada-wide effort by CA MP James Moore, working with students in Canadian Alliance clubs across the country, to organize support for a Private Members' Motion (M-458) directed towards creating: " . . . A comprehensive plan of action to address the issue of drug facilitated sexual assault, which should undertake to (a) to recommend to cabinet that the substances GHB and Rohypnol be identified in the Criminal Code as date-rape-drugs; (b) introduce amendments to the Criminal Code creating a separate Schedule recognizing "date rape drugs" as a weapon; (c) establish, in cooperation with the provinces and territories, a national initiative to educate women on the dangers of date-rape-drugs and related substances; (d) establish, in cooperation with the provinces and territories, a national task force to establish new guidelines in the collection and documentation of evidence in RCMP sexual assault investigations." The above named drugs, Rohypnol and GHB (Gamme Hydroxy Butyrate), are two of the many drugs used across Canadian campuses to facilitate date-rape and sexual assault. Most are odourless, tasteless, and colourless, dissolving in liquids almost immediately, and severely affect the capacities of those persons ingesting them. In many cases, memory loss is a side-effect of the drugs, leaving victims unclear as to what occurred, and in many case unaware that they have been assaulted. While statistics as to the precise incidence of date-rape drug use in Canada are difficult to establish, in the four-year period since the first reported seizure of Rohypnol in 1999 (a Vancouver arrest involving the seizure of over 3500 doses of the drug), the number of reported cases of date-rape drug-use on campuses throughout Canada has been rapidly increasing. Regarding criminalization, the classification of date-rape drugs as weapons would likely allow persons caught using them to be charged under section 272 of the criminal code, Sexual Assault With A Weapon, a charge that carries with it a sentence of up to fourteen (14) years in jail. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin