Pubdate: Wed, 12 May 2004 Source: Agence France-Presse (France Wire) Copyright: 2004 Agence France-Presse Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) AUSTRALIA STATE SEEKS FEDERAL BANKING TO TRIAL POT AS A THERAPY SYDNEY (AFP) - An Australian state has sought central government backing to trial cannabis as a medicinal treatment for people suffering acute but otherwise untreatable pain, officials said. New South Wales premier Bob Carr wrote to conservative Prime Minister John Howard for help in trialing the illegal drug to treat conditions such as HIV (news - web sites), cancer and multiple sclerosis that do not respond to more conventional therapy. Carr said the government had no intention of decriminalising cannabis, and since he had no desire to allow backyard cultivation or purchase from illegal traffickers, alternative ways of accessing the drug would have to be explored. "New South Wales is opposed to any scheme which involves growing cannabis in backyards or requiring sick people to buy it on the black market," Carr said. This, he said, meant looking at alternatives, which in turn required cooperation from the federal government and it was hoped from other Australian states and territories. Carr said importing cannabis products from Canada under strict conditions was one of those alternatives. "Canada and eight American states, including Colorado and Washington, allow the use of cannabis for strictly medicinal purposes," he said. In May last year, Howard said he would support a trial to allow cannabis use for pain relief in the chronically ill as long as the drug was prescribed. But he said he would not back patients growing their own marijuana and remained opposed to the decriminalisation of the drug. The New South Wales government has previously consulted with the British Home Office about the progress of an inhaler spray. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh