Pubdate: Wed, 09 Jun 1999 Source: Canadian Press (Canada) Copyright: 1999 The Canadian Press (CP). Author: Dennis Bueckert TWO PATIENTS GET FEDERAL GO-AHEAD TO SMOKE POT OTTAWA (CP) - The federal government has given permission for the cultivation and use of marijuana for medical purposes for the first time in Canadian history. Health Minister Allan Rock announced Wednesday he has granted special exemptions from federal drug law to Jim Wakeford of Toronto and Jean-Charles Pariseau of Vanier, Ont., both of whom have AIDS. "This about showing compassion to people, often dying, suffering from grave debilitating illness," Rock told the Commons on Wednesday. He said the Health Department will soon invite bids from firms interested in supplying marijuana for use in coming clinical trials. "I want a Canadian source," he said outside the House. "We're going to be putting the job out for tender to find someone who can grow us a reliable consistent quality for research purposes." He denied the move is a step toward legalization of marijuana: "No more than the use of heroin or morphine in hospitals is a step toward legalizing them." People with illnesses such as cancer and AIDS have claimed for years that marijuana helps to relieve pain and stimulate appetite. So far there is little solid scientific data to support those claims. Rock said his department will fund clinical trials at several sites, initially using marijuana supplied by the U.S. National Institute of Drug Abuse. He said he has received 30 applications from individuals wishing to use marijuana for medical purposes, and will process them quickly. The Health Department is also negotiating with a British firm to test a non-smoked form of marijuana, which is ingested using an inhaler. Despite the new openness on medical usage of marijuana, federal laws against the drug remain in force and are applied, resulting in many convictions every year. Critics charge the laws are applied unevenly, with low-income youth the main enforcement target. Currently, marijuana is not approved for medical use in any country. Only a few clinical trials have been done, and they've been inconclusive. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake