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December 31, 1998
New Zealand Health Committee Advocates Relaxing
Marijuana Laws,
Finds Moderate Use Harmless
December 31, Wellington, New
Zealand: A Parliamentary health committee recommends that government
officials review the appropriateness of existing marijuana policies after it determined
that moderate use of the drug posed few health hazards.
"Based on the evidence we have heard in
the course of this inquiry, the negative mental health impacts of cannabis appears to have
been overstated, particularly in relation to occasional adult users of the drug," a
committee spokesman said. "The weight of available evidence suggests that
long-term heavy use of cannabis does not produce severe or gross impairment of cognitive
function. ... Moderate use of the drug does not seem to harm the majority of people
[who try it.]"
The ten-member health select committee examined
evidence regarding marijuana's potential health effects for eight months before issuing
its conclusions. In July, officials from the New Zealand Health Ministry testified
before the committee that moderate marijuana use posed less of a public health risk than
alcohol or tobacco.
Committee chairman Brian Neeson said he hoped
parliament would reconsider the legal status of marijuana when it convenes in February.
He voiced concern that the drug's illegality may dissuade some people from seeking
treatment for marijuana-related problems.
Chris Fowlie, a spokesman for NORML New Zealand
praised the committee's findings. "The Inquiry heard that many of the harms
often associated with cannabis are actually created by its prohibition, while the actual
harms presented by cannabis have been exaggerated," he said. "NORML [New
Zealand] welcomes [these] recommendations to review the [federal] law and demands an
immediate moratorium on arresting cannabis users."
The New Zealand government has three months to
respond in writing to the health committee's recommendations. The inquiry is the
first since 1973 to review federal marijuana policy.
For more information, please contact either
Allen St. Pierre or Paul Armentano of The NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751.
Additional information is also available online from NORML New Zealand at: http://www.norml.org.nz or from the New Zealand Drug
Forum at: http://www.nzdf.org.nz.
Marijuana May Offer Protection Against Tumors, Research Shows
December 31, 1998, Madrid, Spain:
Cell studies performed by researchers at Madrid's Universidad Complutense
demonstrate that THC, one of the active compounds in marijuana, can induce cell death in
certain brain tumor cells without effecting the surrounding healthy cells.
Dr. Franjo Grotenhermen of the German-based
Association for Cannabis as Medicine (ACM) proposed that marijuana's constituents may one
day play a role in cancer treatment. "It is desirable to have a substance that
induces programmed cell death in tumor cells but not in health cells for the treatment of
cancer," he wrote in the December 13 issue of the ACM-Bulletin.
"It has been demonstrated by the Spanish scientists ... that THC could be such
a substance."
The Spanish research team said that their
findings "might provide the basis for a new therapeutic application of
cannabinoids."
At least one previous American animal study
documents that THC may potentially protect against malignancies. The study, which
went unpublicized by federal officials for more than 2 1/2 years, found that rats given
high doses of THC suffered from fewer cancers than those not treated with the agent.
The $2 million federal study became known only after copies of the draft report
were leaked to the publication AIDS Treatment News in January of 1997. The
Boston Globe broke the story nationwide days later.
Details of the Spanish cell research are
available in the latest editions of the scientific journals FEBS Letters and Molecular
Pharmacology.
For more information, please contact The
NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751. For additional information, please contact the
ACM online at: http://www.hanfnet.de/acm or by
e-mail at: ACMed@t-online.de.
Maine Will Decide Medical Marijuana Question In '99
December 31, 1998, Augusta, ME:
Voters will likely decide this November whether to allow the medical use of
marijuana under a doctor's supervision.
Secretary of State Dan Gwadosky said proponents
turned in sufficient signatures to place the measure on the 1999 state ballot. The
proposal seeks to allow seriously ill patients to possess and cultivate marijuana for
medical purposes if they have a recommendation from their physician.
Maine law mandates that all ballot questions
must first go before the Legislature. Unless lawmakers approve the initiative
exactly as proposed, voters have the opportunity to accept or reject it in November.
The proposal asks, "Do you want to allow
patients with specific illnesses to grow and use small amounts of marijuana for treatment,
as long as such use is approved by a doctor?"
Maine's medical marijuana is modeled after an
unsuccessful 1997 Senate bill that sought to exempt patients from criminal penalties if
their use of marijuana was approved by a physician.
For more information, please contact either
Keith Stroup, Esq. or Paul Armentano of NORML @ (202) 483-5500. Additional
information is also available from Americans for Medical Rights @ (310) 394-2952.
New California A.G. Says Legalizing Medical Marijuana Will Be A Priority
December 31, 1998, Sacramento, CA:
Properly implementing California's two-year old medical marijuana law is one of the
top ten priorities for Attorney General-elect Bill Lockyer, The San Francisco Examiner
reported this week.
Lockyer said he supports the law and criticized
outgoing Attorney General Dan Lungren for opposing its adoption. "I think
[Lungren] was overly zealous in continuing to oppose [Prop. 215] even after the [voters
approved it,]" he said. "I joke that there are days when I thought Dan had
a copy of 'Reefer Madness' at home."
Lockyer appointed a task force to examine ways
to better implement Proposition 215, and said he backs a regulated system for distributing
the drug.
California NORML Coordinator Dale Gieringer
called Lockyer's victory critical toward helping officials better define the state's
medical marijuana policies. Americans for Medical Rights spokesman Dave Fratello
agreed. "The change from Lungren is potentially very significant," he
said. "Lockyer has said he understands the conflict we have with federal law
and would like to see this initiative work."
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.
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