Pubdate: Mon, 13 Sep 2004 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2004, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.canoe.com/NewsStand/EdmontonSun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Doug Beazley, Edmonton Sun AFRICAN WEED DRAWS FINE It's a weed out of Africa that turns you into a giddy, sleepless motormouth. It's also illegal in Canada - although your corner dope dealer's probably never heard of it. It's called "khat" (pronounced "cot"). And this month an Edmonton cabbie was fined in a Calgary courtroom for his third attempt to bring some here - a rare instance of someone actually being charged with importing the drug to Canada. "I've never heard of a seizure in Edmonton. I've never even heard the guys talk about the stuff," said Det. Clayton Sach, veteran EPS narcotics cop. "It's not really a street drug here." Earlier this month, Mohamed Ali Nur of Edmonton was fined $2,000 for trying to bring 2,852 grams of khat through the Calgary airport. In his decision, Judge A.A. Fradsham noted that Nur, who is originally from Ethiopia, had been caught on two previous occasions importing khat into Canada and wasn't charged in either instance. "I assume this was in deference to the customs of Mr. Nur's place of birth," Fradsham said in his decision. Khat - also known as "African salad" - is very popular in parts of east Africa, especially where religious bans on alcohol make khat a socially acceptable alternative. In Yemen, according to a U.S. government report, three out of every four people chew khat, and a typical household spends 40% of its income on the stuff. It's a shrub. The active ingredients are alkaloids similar to amphetamine-type compounds. It's typically chewed like plug tobacco, although it can be smoked, or brewed as tea. According to a University of Pennsylvania paper, khat use produces feelings of "exaltation ... of being liberated from space and time" - along with long periods of babbling and euphoria. The effects are similar to cocaine use, but milder. Chronic use can lead to delirium tremens ( the DTs), semicoma and a weakening of the cardiovascular system. Khat is also widely used in parts of western Europe where it's legal. One local Sudanese said he saw people chewing it on street corners when he lived in Italy. "It's more of a Somali and Ethiopian thing," said Yol Piom. "It's not considered an illicit drug in most of Europe." Sach said he doubts khat will ever catch on in Edmonton. "You chew it, and that's a bit too rural for our addicts," he said. "People here prefer something they can smoke or stick in their arms." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager