Pubdate: Mon, 29 Mar 2010 Source: Daily Mail (UK) Copyright: 2010 Associated Newspapers Ltd Contact: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/108 Author: Fiona Macrae EXPERT QUITS TO SINK BAN ON MEOW MEOW Plans to outlaw the drug meow meow were in disarray today after the resignation of a senior government adviser. Moves to outlaw mephedrone, the chemical name for the drug which is said to deliver a so-called 'legal high' and has been linked to at least six deaths, could be delayed for months by the latest twist in a long-running row between academics and politicians. Ministers had hoped to announce the ban today. But the shock departure of Polly Taylor from the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs leaves the Government powerless to update its drugs policy until she is replaced. Dr Taylor's resignation is the latest in an ongoing battle over the relationship between the Government and its scientific advisers. Five members of the ACMD resigned at the end of last year, in protest at the sacking of the panel's head, David Nutt. The professor caused outrage by saying Ecstasy was no more dangerous than 'riding a horse' but the scientific establishment supported him, stating independent government advisers must have the freedom to give their advice without fear of reprisal. The latest resignation is timed to cause maximum embarrassment to the Government. It comes hours before the ACMD was due to announce its decision on the classification of mephedrone, paving the way for a law to be rushed in. But the law states the Government cannot reclassify a drug without consulting a 'properly constituted' ACMD - one which has a vet among its members The departure of Cambridge-educated Dr Taylor, the panel's sole vet, leaves the Government powerless to act, until she is replaced. The legal process leading to the banning of the drug was already expected to take at least three months. It could now take significantly longer. In a letter to Home Secretary Alan Johnson, Dr Taylor, a freelance consultant in veterinary anaesthesia, said her resignation could be traced back to the sacking of Professor Nutt. She said in the months following the professor's departure, the Government had failed to give its advisers the independence they deserve. In particular, a new code of conduct for its advisers fails to provide a guarantee that they can disagree with Government policy without fear of reprisal. Calling for climate of 'mutual trust', Dr Taylor said: 'I feel 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.' On meow meow, Gordon Brown has said the Government is 'determined to act to prevent this evil hurting the young people of the country'. Lib Dem science spokesman Dr Evan Harris said the Government had 'shot itself in the foot'. 'They were warned repeatedly by me and major scientific organisations that unless they pledged to allow their unpaid independent scientists the freedom and independence to give their advice without fear of reprisal by politicians they would face more resignations. 'Scientists are simply not prepared to be treated like Professor David Nutt was. 'If it is necessary to act urgently to ban mephedrone then, by provoking this resignation by their refusal to respect the scientists who offer advice, the Home Secretary will now be forced to wait a delay while the Council is properly constituted. 'This episodes tells us what we should have learned from the BSE disaster - if we treat scientists badly, then the Government wont get good advice and everyone suffers.' - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake