Pubdate: Thu, 04 Dec 2003 Source: Dominion Post, The (New Zealand) Copyright: 2003 The Dominion Post Contact: http://www.dompost.co.nz Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2550 TANCZOS AND ANDERTON TAKE POT SHOTS OVER CANNABIS As MPs in Parliament debated whether to stub out cigarette smoking, Green MP Nandor Tanczos and Progressive leader Jim Anderton traded pot-shots of a different kind. About 150 people turned up at the Johnsonville Community Centre in Wellington last night to hear the pair debate whether cannabis should be decriminalised. Mr Tanczos, a Rastafarian who has said he smokes cannabis for religious reasons, said personal use of tobacco, alcohol and cannabis by adults should not be a criminal offence. His remark was greeted with thin applause and a sole cheer from the audience, which contained a cross-section of the community. He went on to give a history of cannabis use and pointed out that it was first imported to New Zealand by a nun, mother Mary Aubert. Law reform was not "radical or far out", he said, citing Canada as an example where instant fines for possession of small amounts of cannabis were given out like "parking tickets". Mr Tanczos said law reform would take power away from gangs which control the drug trade because users could grow their own. Youth and mental health workers, a principal and parents asked how the MP could justify his stance given the effects the drug had on some children and teenagers but Mr Tanczos said the problems they talked about proved the law did not work. Fellow debater Mr Anderton, who opposes decriminalisation, quoted reports that listed the health dangers of cannabis. "So why would we say it's okay to let it rip, mate?" The Green Party was worried about fizzy drinks, fast food and breakfast cereal but it defied logic by wanting a drug decriminalised, he said. But Mr Tanczos fired back, saying they were not asking for coco-pops to be banned but wanted adults to be able to make informed choices, which also applied to cannabis. Mr Anderton, who confessed to being a "wowser" in his youth and not touching alcohol until his 30s, said the only answer to New Zealand's cannabis problem was to stop supply and focus on education and treatment. Toward the end of the debate, a man said he had smoked a cannabis cigarette outside the hall during the meeting and asked Mr Anderton if that made him a criminal. He was a lawbreaker and a poor example but not necessarily a criminal, Mr Anderton replied. Mr Tanczos originally challenged United Future leader Peter Dunne to debate the issue in the Ohariu-Belmont electorate. Debate chairman Helene Ritchie said Mr Dunne had advised he had "prior commitments" and could not attend. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman