|
News Release |
1001
Connecticut Ave, NW - Ste 710 - Washington, DC 20036 |
August 6, 1998
Marijuana Poses Few Health Risks, New Zealand Health Ministry Says
August 6, 1998, Wellington, New
Zealand: Smoking marijuana poses few serious health risks, Health Ministry
officials told a Parliament select committee last week. The ongoing hearings are in
response to a report issued in April by a coalition of New Zealand scientists and health
care professionals who support legalizing marijuana.
"Overall, the current public health risks
of cannabis use are small to moderate in size, and are less than the public health risk of
tobacco or alcohol use," the Ministry said in a written statement.
NORML Foundation Executive Director Allen St.
Pierre said the Health Ministry's position echoes those of other international health
organizations. "Both the World Health Organization and the French medical
institute INSERM concluded earlier this year that marijuana smoking causes less harm to
public health than alcohol and cigarettes," he said.
The Ministry also said that most New Zealanders
only use the drug occasionally, and downplayed health dangers even among long-term heavy
users. Dr. Nick Judson, deputy director of mental health, said that no more than two
to three percent of the population were at serious risk from marijuana abuse.
Dr. David Hadorn, director of the New Zealand
Drug Policy Forum Trust, testified in favor of establishing a system to regulate marijuana
consumption. "By driving cannabis use underground, we surely make the situation
far worse than would be the case under a controlled, regulated system of cannabis
distribution," he said. "Creating a flourishing black market for a widely
used substance inevitably fosters criminal activity."
Assistant Police Commissioner Ian Holyoake told
the committee that he opposed marijuana legalization, but remained open to the possibility
of decriminalization. He admitted that criminalizing the drug had not reduced
marijuana use.
For more information, please contact either
Allen St. Pierre or Paul Armentano of The NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751. Dr.
David Hadorn of the New Zealand Drug Policy Forum Trust may be contacted via e-mail at: David.Hadorn@vuw.ac.nz.
States Certify More Medical Marijuana Initiatives For Fall Ballot
August 6, 1998, Washington, DC:
Voters in Washington state and Nevada will decide whether to legalize medical
marijuana this fall, state officials affirmed last week. Voters in five states and
the District of Columbia anticipate voting on this issue in November.
Washington's Initiative 692 and the Nevada
proposal seek to exempt seriously ill patients from state criminal marijuana penalties if
they use marijuana under the supervision of their physician.
State officials in Alaska and Oregon previously
certified similar initiatives for the November 3 ballot.
"These tightly worded proposals recognize
that patients who use marijuana at the advice of their physician should not be victims of
the 'war on drugs,'" NORML Executive Director R. Keith Stroup, Esq. said.
Nevada state guidelines mandate the initiative
to win voter approval this November and again in November 2000 before it can become law.
Petitioners qualified for the ballot after a recount determined that more than 70
signatures disqualified by county officials were actually valid signatures.
For more information, please contact either
Keith Stroup of NORML @ (202) 483-5500 or Dave Fratello of Americans for Medical Rights @
(301) 394-2952.
California Marijuana Arrests Soar Despite 215's Passage
August 6, 1998, Sacramento, CA:
California law enforcement arrested more citizens on marijuana charges in 1997 than
in any year since 1985, newly released figures from the Bureau of Criminal Statistics
revealed. The rising number of arrests one full year after voters legalized the use
of marijuana for medical purposes alarmed many activists who question whether police are
continuing to punish patients despite the new law.
"The government has spent more money
trying to persecute medical marijuana patients than trying to implement Prop. 215,"
charged California NORML Coordinator Dale Gieringer. "Not only has Attorney
General Dan Lungren ignored Prop. 215's mandate to establish a plan for 'safe and
affordable distribution' of medical marijuana, he is wasting taxpayers' money prosecuting
those who do."
Law enforcement arrested 57,667 Californians on
marijuana charges in 1997, the data showed. Seizures of cultivated marijuana also
rose to near-record levels in 1997, law enforcement statistics indicated.
"These arrest figures fly in the face of
prohibitionist claims that the passage of Proposition 215 'legalized' marijuana for
recreational use," NORML Executive Director R. Keith Stroup, Esq. said.
"Police continue to arrest marijuana smokers in California -- many of whom are valid
medical patients -- at a record pace despite the protections allotted by the new
law."
For more information, please contact either
Allen St. Pierre of The NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751 or Dale Gieringer of California
NORML @ (415) 563-5858.
Indian Tribe Approves Ordinance Supporting Hemp Cultivation
August 6, 1998, Pine Ridge, S.D.:
Council members of the Oglala Sioux Indian Tribe approved legislation recognizing
hemp as a "safe and profitable" crop. The ordinance amends the Tribal
Penal Code to legally distinguish between hemp and marijuana, and opens the door for legal
cultivation of the low-THC strain of the plant.
The passage of this ordinance "sets the
stage for land-based economic development on the reservation and probably a legal
challenge by the tribe in federal court," said ordinance spokesman Joe American
Horse.
At least one other Indian tribe, the Navajo
Nation, has passed legislation supporting hemp cultivation on sovereign land.
For more information, please contact either
Paul Armentano or attorney Tanya Kangas of The NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751.
Tom Cook of the Slim Butte Land-Use Association may be contacted @ (308) 432-2290.
Three Recent Polls Reveal Overwhelmingly Support For Marijuana Reform
August 6, 1998, Washington, DC:
Three recent polls conducted by the BBC, Time Magazine, and the
Internet news journal IntellectualCapital.com
demonstrate overwhelming public support for marijuana reform.
Ninety-six percent of respondents to a July 28
BBC telephone poll answered that marijuana should be legalized for medical purposes.
The two American polls examined the broader issue of reforming criminal penalties
against marijuana and other illicit drugs. Over 90 percent of respondents to the Time Magazine survey
answered that the government should legalize marijuana and other "recreational"
drugs for adults only. More than 80 percent of respondents to the IntellectualCapital.com poll
said that legalizing marijuana and other drugs would be their "next step ... in
America's 'war on drugs.'"
Allen St. Pierre, executive director of The
NORML Foundation, said that the polls' outcomes were not surprising. "These
results demonstrate that a significant portion of the public strongly disapprove of
arresting and jailing marijuana smokers, and approve of the medical use of marijuana under
the supervision of a licensed physician," he said.
For more information, please contact either
Allen St. Pierre or Paul Armentano of The NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751.
-END-