Pubdate: Fri, 22 Jul 2016 Source: Daily Record (UK) Copyright: 2016 Daily Record and Sunday Mail Ltd. Contact: http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/111 Author: Stephen Stewart PUFF JUSTICE Amputee's Plea to Legalise Medical Marijuana A WAR hero who lost both legs in an Afghan bomb blast is forced to break the law to get cannabis to ease his pain. Lance Corporal Callum Brown is now leading calls to legalise the drug for medical use. He wants to see cannabis made available to patients like him who suffer agonising pain 24 hours a day. Callum, 28, also shattered his pelvis in the huge explosion after he stepped on a boobytrap bomb while on patrol in Helmand five years ago. Speaking exclusively to the Record, he said: "As well as my other injuries, I have no skin on my backside it's just thin scar tissue so the nerve damage and the phantom pains are the main reason for smoking. "It also helps with depression as it's easy to get a bit down. After seeing kids suffering and mothers of dead children screaming in my face in Afghanistan, asking why we did this, I decided enough was enough. "I wanted to speak out to make sure children don't go on suffering. "Kids with epilepsy and other conditions can be helped with some of the active ingredients in cannabis. "Cannabis has been used for thousands of years. Ancient people knew all about its medicinal qualities. "I shouldn't have to be a criminal to get something that eases my pain and makes life easier. "After I was injured in Afghanistan, the doctors had me on strong painkillers. These chemicals had very strong side-effects - they could even make you suicidal, which obviously wasn't good when I was trying to cope with my injuries. "With cannabis, there is no down side. It eases my pain. "My injuries mean I am effectively sitting on the base of my spine all day. When I am sitting down, I am sitting on bone. Cannabis takes the edge off the searing pain. "It should be legal for medical use for people like me who really need it, not people who just take it to get high. "Cannabis has all sorts of medical uses - I saw some terrible suffering in Afghanistan, especially with young kids. "I just want to make sure children get whatever they need. I don't want suffering children to be denied anything that could help take away their pain. "It's important that doctors have the full arsenal of pain relief available to them. I have seen enough suffering and don't want to witness any more. "As I get older, I realise how important it is that we look out for people, especially young ones. In Afghanistan, that was the worst thing, seeing how the kids suffered through no fault of their own." Callum, from Penicuik, Midlothian, is now leading calls for the law to be changed so that British doctors can prescribe the medical cannabis he needs to ease his pain. He was injured in 2011 in an explosion during his last patrol before he was due to return home to fiancee Laura Taylor. The couple had been due to marry but were forced to cancel their plans after the bomb blast. Instead they tied the knot in a ceremony at Birmingham's Queen Elizabeth Hospital where Callum was treated after being flown home from Camp Bastion. Callum, who served with 2 Scots, the Royal Highland Fusiliers, lost two thirds of his body weight as he recovered from the blast. At one point, he was taking more than 30 pills a day to deal with the pain - but now he says smoking a small amount of cannabis helps him. He said: "My mum and wife were there when I woke up. I said, 'My legs are gone, aren't they?' and they just said, 'Yes'. "When I was blown up, I was blasted about 30ft into the air. It didn't even knock me out, I was conscious the whole time. It was amazingly horrible. "I had even said before I left camp that day that I had a bad feeling about this one. "I'd offered to take somebody's place on a foot patrol to give them a rest because it was my last day before my R&R. I wouldn't change what happened to me because maybe someone else wouldn't have survived. "There was some light at the end of the tunnel - the medic who saved my life came to meet me in hospital. He went to the cafe with my wife's wee sis, they exchanged numbers and now they are married. "I now have a wee nephew and another on the way. So had I not got blown up, my wee gem wouldn't be here and neither would his wee brother be on the way, so that makes it worth every bit of pain." Cannabis campaign End Our Pain said: "Callum's case highlights the need for an urgent change in the law. "Our estimates are that up to a million people in the UK rely on cannabis to help ease the symptoms of conditions like MS, Crohn's and extreme pain. "At the moment, all these people face a terrible dilemma - either break the law or continue to suffer. "They are patients, not criminals. It's totally unfair that access to medical cannabis is illegal here in the UK but legal in many European countries and US states where those in authority have listened to the evidence." Roy Lees, of drug rehab charity Teen Challenge, added: "I have real sympathy for people in the position that this man is in. "The down side of cannabis is that almost every serious drug addict starts off on it, so it is a really dangerous drug in that respect. "But when you have cases like this where it is clearly being used for pain relief, there is a good argument for giving some kind of controlled legal access to cannabis. "It is not on that a guy who has gone to war for his country has to feel like a criminal." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom