Pubdate: Fri, 05 Aug 2005 Source: Parksville Qualicum Beach News (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Parksville Qualicum Beach News Contact: http://www.pqbnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1361 Author: Neil Horner Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Marc+Emery (Emery, Marc) LOCAL POT ACTIVISTS DECRY MARC EMERY'S ARREST The arrest of Marijuana Party president Marc Emery and two of his employees last Friday was a blatant attack on Canada's sovereignty, say two local pot activists. Emery and employees Michelle Rainey and Gregory Williams were arrested by RCMP at the request of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) for allegedly selling marijuana. The United States government is seeking Emery's extradition on the basis that the trio allegedly conspired to distribute marijuana seeds in the United States and launder money. If extradited, Emery could face as much as life in prison. That, says Mid-Island Compassion Club head Mark Russell, is a clear violation of Canada's sovereignty. "They are trying to get us to send a Canadian citizen down there for something that's not a crime in Canada," he says. "I think our government should stand up to them, period. This is not a marijuana issue. This is an issue about Canadian sovereignty and human rights. Mid-Island Compassion Club has been selling medical marijuana to people suffering from a number of ailments such as AIDS, cancer and multiple sclerosis (MS) in the Oceanside area for the last four years. "If Marc Emery has committed a crime in Canada he should be tried in Canada," he says. "Since he hasn't committed a crime that I'm aware of, he should be freed and the Americans should be told to go to hell, or somewhere nearby. Emery was released on bail Wednesday. Russell says the arrest put a chill down the spines of people involved in the marijuana activist community, but he doesn't think his small operation, which serves between 60 and 70 members, will be targeted. Mik Mann, the Alberni-Qualicum candidate for the B.C. Marijuana Party, agrees with Russell's assessment. "Here is Marc Emery paying huge amounts of income tax for eight or nine years for selling seeds and the RCMP and Vancouver police were well aware of what he was doing," Mann says. "Health Canada has been directing a number of legal exemptees (people who, like Mann, are allowed to smoke marijuana for medical reasons) to Marc's web site as a source of seeds to grow their medicine. Mann says Canada has a very different attitude towards marijuana than the United States, and that position should be made clear. Mann says he plans to attend a protest at the DEA office in Vancouver next month, where he plans to light up his bong in defiance. Vacationing Nanaimo-Alberni MP Dr. James Lunney was not available to comment on the issue by press time. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake