Pubdate: Mon, 29 Mar 2010 Source: Sun, The (UK) Copyright: 2010 News Group Newspapers Ltd Contact: http://www.thesun.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/433 Author: Neil Millard MEOW MEOW BAN 'WITHIN WEEKS' DANCE drug mephedrone - known as meow meow - could be banned within weeks, Home Secretary Alan Johnson said today. The 'legal high' mephedrone has already been linked to 25 deaths in England and Scotland. Mr Johnson said it would be banned and made a class B drug. A ban on importing the drug has also been introduced from today. The Home Secretary's announcement came after he was given a report backing a mephedrone ban by Professor Les Iversen, chairman of the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD). The ACMD said 18 people in England and seven in Scotland had died after taking the substance. Chief government drugs advisor Professor Les Iversen told a meeting of the council that it was still unclear whether the drug caused the deaths. But, he added: "I'm sure that you like us are quite alarmed by these increasing statistics of possible deaths attributed to this drug." Resigned Plans to ban mephedrone were thrown into doubt earlier today after a leading government drugs advisor dramatically quit. Dr Polly Taylor resigned from the ACMD just hours before Home Secretary Alan Johnson was expected to announce a proposed ban. She is the sixth advisor on the body to quit since Professor David Nutt was sacked last year after he claimed ecstasy was less dangerous than alcohol. Mr Johnson is expected to accept Professor Iversen's likely advice that mephedrone should be made a class-B drug. It was unclear whether the council could issue the government the necessary advice ahead of a ban without Dr Perry but the Home Office insisted the council can still fulfil its duties and it would act on its recommendations "immediately". The change in the law was expected to be passed on April 8. In a letter to the Home Secretary, Dr Taylor, the only veterinary consultant on the ACMD, hinted at the demise of Prof Nutt by saying she feared the panel's advice was not being treated independently. She wrote: "I feel that there is little more we can do to describe the importance of ensuring that advice is not subjected to a desire to please ministers or the mood of the day's Press." Mephedrone has been blamed for a string of deaths in recent weeks. Last week Lois Waters, 24, from Norton, North Yorks, became the latest person to die after taking the drug. It followed the sudden deaths of Louis Wainwright, 18, and Nicholas Smith, 19, in Scunthorpe, Humberside. After a change in classification to class-B, dealers will face up to 14 years in prison. Meanwhile a TV probe revealed Chinese chemical factories are planning to get round a ban by producing new 'legal highs'. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D