Pubdate: Tue, 02 Aug 2011
Source: New Zealand Herald (New Zealand)
Copyright: 2011 New Zealand Herald
Contact:  http://www.nzherald.co.nz/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/300
Author: Nicholas Jones

DUNNE'S LAW PUTS BLOCK ON SYNTHETIC CANNABIS

Kronic and other synthetic cannabis will be pulled from New Zealand
shelves within weeks - but manufacturers claim the move to ban their
products is short-sighted and will be futile.

Urgent legislation going before Parliament today will allow all 43
current synthetic cannabis products to be classed as "temporary
controlled drugs" and withdrawn from sale.

Associate Health Minister Peter Dunne will have the power to place
products in the category, which would ban them for 12 months.

During that time, a product would be assessed by a committee -
appointed by Mr Dunne - which would judge whether it was safe to be
sold.

Articles in the Herald have highlighted an increase in the number of
people seeking medical treatment after using synthetic cannabis, and
the aggressive marketing of the drugs to young people.

Mr Dunne told the Herald medical professionals' reports on the harm
synthetic cannabis caused made him doubt the drugs would be sold in
New Zealand again.

But Zaid Musa, of manufacturer Enjoi Products, said that although
products could be quickly banned, they could still probably be on the
market for at least a month before being detected and pulled.

"This is not the end of the legal high industry in New Zealand.
There's always ways around it; there are always loopholes."

That was supported by the co-owner of the Hemp Store in central
Auckland, Chris Fowlie, who said it would take some time before
authorities noticed new products.

Matt Bowden, who imports the chemicals used to make Kronic, would not
comment directly on what the industry might do in response to the ban.

"But you are aware as I am of ... the futility of banning
drugs."

Mr Dunne said he thought the ban would be "pretty belts and
braces".

"The timeframes are so tight. In each case it's seven days. So if
products are reformulated, I'll just do the same thing over and over
again."

Synthetic cannabis has been made and sold in New Zealand for about 10
years, but use and sale of the R18 products were low-key until recently.

Very little is known about the short-term or long-term effects of
smoking the chemicals used in synthetic cannabis.

In July, screening by Environmental Science and Research (ESR)
revealed that two products illegally contained a prescription sedative.

Mr Dunne was criticised after he opted against banning the products
following a report by the Expert Advisory Committee on Drugs in March.

But yesterday, he said he believed he had now found a way to remove
the drugs from sale.

"While I can understand the public clamour for action and to just get
on and ban it, it's not quite that simple, I had to get it right."

Mr Bowden predicted the move would push about 500,000 users of
synthetic cannabis to buy genuine cannabis on the black market.

The Herald understands people will not face charges if found with a
small amount of a banned synthetic cannabis - which the industry says
will lead to stock-piling.

Massey University senior researcher Chris Wilkins said the banning of
BZP-based party pills showed what the effect of banning synthetic
cannabis would be.

Forty-nine per cent of men aged 20 to 24 had used BZP-based pills in
2006 but since their ban, use of legal substitutes had been minimal.

Mr Dunne said the bans were a stop-gap measure until the Government
considered a Law Commission recommendation to require the industry to
prove its products were safe.

But the Law Commission recommendations were "high level" and it could
be a challenge to determine the "safety" threshold for products such
as Kronic.
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MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.