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Date: Tue, 31 Jul 2001 03:43:12 +0200
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Subject: [turmel] Congratulations!
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[[ JCT: Hi Freed:
Much in this is not true.
In Canada, we all say the Dutch are first legal.
Because government announces it is supposed to make it easier, NOT.
But thanks for passing this on and please send such cannabis info
not just to the [turmel] group but also to the discussions group:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ]]



Today, in the Dutch news, a message was broadcast that Marijuana has
been legalized for medical purposes in Canada as the first nation (even
before the Netherlands). I guess it is your success, and i like to
congratulate you cordially for that.

And i hope that you now be available again for the design of the new
money system. By the way, did you look at my musings accessible via my
opening page  http://www.planetwork.org   If you have any comments,
additions, clarifications, i will be happy to add or change.

Here is the CNN article i found (no mention of your name though...):

--------
Canada lets terminally ill grow, smoke marijuana

July 30, 2001 Posted: 3:49 PM EDT (1949 GMT)

OTTAWA, Canada (Reuters) --
Canada became the first country in
the world on Monday to allow
terminally ill patients to grow and
smoke their own marijuana,
overriding protests from doctors
who said the decision could put
them in an awkward situation.

Until now, anyone in Canada wanting
to smoke pot to alleviate pain had to
apply to Health Minister Allan Rock for
special permission. Some 300 have
already done so.

But from Monday, anyone with a
terminal illness expected to live less than a year will be allowed
access to marijuana on the production of a
doctor's certificate.

Others able to benefit will include those suffering serious pain from
conditions like multiple sclerosis, cancer, AIDS and epilepsy as well as
severe forms of arthritis and spinal cord problems.

"This compassionate measure will improve the quality of life of sick
Canadians, particularly those who are terminally ill," Rock said in a statement.

Groups working with the terminally and seriously ill warmly welcomed the
change in rules.

"I am very glad to be living in a country that is being so
progressive...(this) really makes us a country to be proud of and I hope
it stays that way," said Derek Thaczuk from the Toronto-based People
With AIDS Foundation.

Neuropharmacology professor Roger Pertwee, a leading expert on cannabis
from Scotland's Aberdeen University, told Reuters that Canada should be
praised for its courage. "It will certainly make other countries take it
seriously," he said.

The Canadian move contrasts sharply
with the situation in the United States,
where the Supreme Court ruled in May
that cannabis clubs could not legally
distribute marijuana as a "medical
necessity" for seriously ill patients.

The U.S. Justice Department questions
marijuana's medical usefulness and says it must remain banned.

Marijuana is prohibited in Canada as well and sufferers will need a
permit to grow their own supply. But they can designate someone to grow
it for them or -- at some stage in the future -- buy it from
the government.

Last December, Ottawa awarded a C$5.8 million ($3.7 million) contract to
a company to grow federally approved marijuana in a former mine near a
remote Manitoban town. The first pot for sale should be ready next year.

Patients permitted to smoke marijuana for medical purposes will be
allowed a 30-day supply at any given time.

Canada's doctors are unenthusiastic about the idea, saying it will force
them to decide whether patients should be allowed access to a substance
that has no proven medicinal value.

"We are still disappointed the fundamental medical issues of quality,
efficacy and patient safety have been ignored," the Canadian Medical
Association (CMA) said in a statement.

"These regulations are placing Canadian physicians and their patients in
the precarious position of attempting to access a product that has not
gone through the normal protocols of rigorous pre-market testing."

The CMA said it feared patients might try to ask for marijuana to combat
the symptoms of any condition, or pressure their doctors to be given
marijuana for recreational purposes.

Rock dismisses talk that the new regulations will lead to the
decriminalization of marijuana, but there are signs the government is
under some pressure.

Justice Minister Anne McLellan says she is open to debate on the issue
while former prime minister Joe Clark, who leads the minority
Conservative party, said in May he supported moves toward
decriminalization of the drug.

Cannabis is widely used recreationally in Canada and Robin Ellins, owner
of a cannabis shop in Toronto, called on the government to rethink its
approach to what he said was a nontoxic and nonaddictive substance.

"I don't think there should be any issue whatsoever around this plant
any more. We should be decriminalizing outright it for all Canadians who
want access to this," he told CBC television.

--------
On with the good work.
Cordially yours
freed








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