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Vaporizing:
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benzene, a known carcinogen, plus toluene and naphthalene.
Carbon monoxide and smoke tars were both qualitatively reduced
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A chronology of cannabis
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Cultivating cannabis:
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2005 Symposium on the Cannabinoids June 23rd - 28th, 2005
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A Chronology of Cannabis
2737 BC: Cannabis referred to as a "superior"
herb in the world's first medical text, or pharmacopoeia, Shen Nung's
Pen Ts'ao, in China
1500 BC: Cannabis-smoking Scythians sweep through Europe and Asia,
settling and inventing the scythe.
1400 BC: Cultural and religious use of ganga or cannabis, and charas
or hashish (resin) recorded used by Hindus in India.
c600 BC: Zend-Avesta, Indian scripture, speaks of hemp's intoxicating
resin.
c500 BC: Gautama Buddha said to have survived by eating hempseed.
Cannabis used in Germany (Hochdorf Hallstatt D wagon burial site).
First botanical drawings of cannabis in Constantinopolitaus.
450 BC: Herodotus
records Scythians and Thracians as consuming cannabis and making fine linens of hemp.
300 BC: Carthage and Rome struggle for political and commercial
power over hemp and spice trade routes in the Mediterranean.
100 BC: Chinese make paper from hemp and mulberry.
70 BC: Roman Emperor Nero's surgeon, Dioscorides, praises cannabis
for making the stoutest cords and for its medicinal properties.
c30 AD: Jesus teaches :Not that which goeth into the mouth defileth
a man; but that which cometh out of the mouth, this defileth a man
(Matthew 15:11). The Gospels refer to the New Wine and declare that
it is best when the clusters are ripe.
Back to the top
100 AD: Roman surgeon Dioscorides names the plant cannabis sativa
and describes various medicinal uses. Pliny reported of industrial
uses and wrote a manual on farming hemp.
400 AD: Cannabis cultivated for the first time in the UK at Old
Buckenham Mere
500 AD: First botanical drawing of hemp in Constantinopolitanus
600 AD: Germans, Franks, Vikings etc all use hemp fibre.
800 AD: Mohammed allows cannabis but forbids the use of alcohol.
1000 AD: The English word "hempe" first listed in a dictionary.
Moslems produce hashish medicine and social use.
1150 AD: Moslems use hemp to start Europe's first paper mill. Most
of the paper is made from hemp for the next 750 years, including
Bibles.
1379 AD: Emir Soudon Sheikhouni of Joneima prohibits cannabis consumption
amongst the poor, destroys the crops, and punishes offenders by
pulling out their teeth.
1484 AD: Inquisitor Pope Innocent VIII outlaws hashish.
1494 AD: Hemp paper industry starts in England.
1545 AD: Hemp agriculture arrives in China.
1554 AD: The Spanish grow hemp in Peru.
1563 AD: English Queen Elizabeth I decrees that land owners with
more than 60 acres must grow hemp or be fined 5 pounds.
1564 AD: King Philip of Spain orders hemp grown throughout his
empire from modern Arhentina to Oregon.
1600 AD: Dutch achieve the "Golden Age" through hemp commerce.
Explorers find "wilde hempe" in North America.
1606 AD: The British take cannabis to Canada for maritime uses.
1611 AD: The British start growing cannabis in Virginia.
Back to the top
1619 AD: Virginia colony makes hemp cultivation mandatory, followed
by most other colonies. Europe pays hemp bounties.
1621 AD: The Anatomy of Melancholy claims cannabis is a treatment
for depression.
1631 AD: Hemp used as money throughout American colonies.
1632 A : The Pilgrims take cannabis to New England.
1637 AD: The General Court at Hartford, Conneticut, orders that
all families plant one teaspoon of cannabis seeds.
1639 AD: Massachusetts Courts follow Hartford.
1753 AD: Cannabis Sativa classified by Linneaus.
1763 AD: New English Dictionary says cannabis root applied to skin
eases inflammation.
1776 AD: Declaration of Independence drafted on hemp paper.
1791 AD: President Washington sets duties on hemp to encourage
domestic industry. "Make the most of the Indian Hemp Seed" ........President
George Washington. (Library of USA Congress 1794 vol. 33 p.270).
President Jefferson calls hemp a necessity and urges farmers to
grow hemp instead of tobacco.
1800 AD: Cotton gins make cheaper fibre than
hemp. Napoleon prohibits his men in Egypt from using cannabis, but
to little effect.
1835 AD: The Club de Hashichines is founded.
1839 AD: Homeopathy journal 'American Provers' Union' publishes
first report on effects of cannabis.
1840 AD: "Prohibition... goes beyond the bounds of reason in that
it attempts to control mans' appetite through legislation and makes
a crime out of things that are not even crimes... A prohibition
law strikes a blow at the very principles upon which our Government
was founded"...........Abraham Lincoln (December 1840)
1841 AD:
Dr. W.B.O'Shaughnessy,"On the Preparation
of the Indian Hemp or Ganja" introduces cannabis to western science.
1845 AD: Psychologist and inventor of modern psychopharmacology
and psychotimimetric drug treatment, Jacques-Joseph Moreau de Tours
documents physical and mental benefits of cannabis.
Back to the top
1850 AD: Petrochemical age begins. Toxic sulphite and chlorine
processes make paper from trees: steamships replace (hemp) sails;
tropical fibres introduced.. USA census records 8327 hemp plantations
of over 2000 acres each.
1854 AD: Bayard Taylor essay Visions of Hashish.
1857 AD: Fitz Hugh Ludlow publishes "The Hasheesh Eater"
1857 AD: Smith Brothers of Edinburgh market cannabis indica extracts.
1860 AD: First governmental commission study of cannabis and hashish
conducted by Ohio State Medical Society. It catalogues the conditions
for which cannabis is beneficial: neuralgia, nervous rheumatism,
mania, whooping cough, asthma, chronic bronchitis, muscular spasms,
epilepsy, infantile convulsions, palsy, uterine hemorrhage, dysmenorrhea,
hysteria, alcohol withdrawal and loss of appetite.
1868 AD: The Emir of Egypt makes the possession of cannabis a capital
offence.
1869 AD: Tales of Hashish by A.C. Kimmens
1870 AD: Cannabis listed in US Pharmacopoeia as a medicine.
1870 AD: South Africa worried about cannabis use among Indian workers,
passes a law forbidding the smoking, use or possession of hemp by
Indians.
1876 AD: Hashish served at American Centennial Exposition.
1877 AD: The Sultan of Turkey makes cannabis illegal, to little
effect.
1894 AD:
British Indian Hemp Drugs Commission studies social use of cannabis and comes
out firmly against its prohibition.
1895 AD: First known use of the name "marijuana" for smoking, by
Pancho Villa's supporters in Sonora, Mexico.
Back to the top
1909 AD: Shanghai Conference: first international meeting on drugs
is held to discuss opium. The USA passes an act to prohibit the
buying or selling of opium for non-medicinal purposes.
1910 AD: African-American "reefer" use reported in Jazz Clubs in
New Orleans, said to be influencing white people. Mexicans smoking
marijuana in Texas. South Africa prohibits cannabis.
1911 AD: Hindus reported to be using ganja in San Francisco.
1911 AD: South Africa bans cannabis.
1912 AD: "Essay on Hasheesh" by Victor Rolson. Possibilities of
putting controls on cannabis use is first raised.
1912 AD: Hague Conference; second international meeting on drugs.
46 nations discuss opium, morphine, cocaine, heroin and cannabis.
The Hague Convention for the Suppression of Opium and Other Drugs,
was drawn up, requiring parties to confine to medical and legitimate
purposes the manufacture, sale and use of opium, heroin, morphine
and cocaine; Cannabis was not included. (From Mandeson, D. From
Mr Sin to Mr Big, A history of Australian Drug Laws, Oxford University
Press Melbourne 1995)
1912 AD: First suggestions that cannabis should be banned internationally,
at the First Opium Conference.
1915 AD: Utah State, then California and Texas outlaw cannabis.
Cocaine banned in the USA.
1916 AD: USDA Bulletin 404 calls for a new program of expansion
of hemp to replace uses of timber by industry.
1919 AD: Texas outlaws cannabis. Alcohol is prohibited throughout
the USA. Cannabis is still legal in most States.
1920 AD: DuPont experiments with petrochemicals.
Gang war takes over the alcohol industry, homicides increase drastically.
Back to the top
1923 AD: South African delegate at League of Nations calls for
international controls on cannabis, claiming that it makes mine
workers less active. Britain insists on further research.
1923 AD: Louisiana, Nevada, Oregon and Washington outlaw cannabis.
1924 AD: At the Second International Opiates conference Egyptian
delegate claims serious problems are associated with hashish use
and calls for immediate international controls. Sub-committee listens
to Egypt and Turkey. Cannabis declared a narcotic. Cannabis Ruderalis
identified by Lamarck.
1927 AD: New York outlaws cannabis.
1928 AD: UK Dangerous Drugs Act (September 28th) 1925 becomes law
and makes cannabis illegal.
1929 AD: The Panama Canal Zone Report concludes that there is no
evidence that cannabis use is habit-forming or deleterious, recommending
no action be taken against cannabis use or sale.
1929 AD: South West states make cannabis illegal as part of a move
to oust Mexican immigrants.
1930 AD: Henry Ford makes his motor cars out of hemp with hemp
paint and hemp fuel. New machines invented to break hemp, process
the fibre and convert the pulp or hurds into paper, plastics etc.
1200 hash bars in New York City. Racist fears of Mexicans, Asians
and African-Americans lead the cry for cannabis to be outlawed.
1930's AD New mechanised hemp harvesting methods
invented
1930 AD: Louis Armstrong arrested in Los Angeles for possession
of cannabis.
1931 AD: Federal Bureau of Narcotics formed with Anslinger at the
head. By now 29 US states have banned non-prescription cannabis
1934 AD: Anslinger refers to "ginger-haired niggers" in FBI official
circulars.
1936 AD: South Western states call for FBI to ban cannabis.
Back to the top
1937 AD: Marijuana Tax Act forbids hemp farming. The Act was based
on the Machine Gun Transfer Act which made it illegal to pass on
machine guns without a government stamp - there being no such stamps
available. By applying this strategy to marijuana, Anslinger was
able to effectively ban hemp without contravening constitutional
rights.
1937 AD: DuPont files patents for nylon, plastics and a new bleaching
process for paper. Anslinger testifies to congress that Marijuana
is the most violence-causing drug known to man. The objections of
the American Medical Association are ignored. The Marijuana Transfer
Tax Bill (14th April) introduced to US House, Ways and Means Committee,
passed December, prohibits industrial and medical uses and calls
flowering tops a narcotic. Violations attract 200 dollar fines.
Birdseed, rope and cordage are exempted from tax.
1937 AD: DuPont patents plastics, seizing the opportunity created
by cannabis hemp prohibition
1939 AD:
LaGuardia Report started
1941 AD: Cannabis dropped from USA Pharmacopoeia
1941 AD: Henry Ford's car is made from and runs on cannabis.
1943 AD: Hemp for Victory program urges farmers to grow hemp to
help war effort.
1943 AD: US Military Surgeon magazine declares that smoking cannabis
is no more harmful than smoking tobacco.
1944 AD: New York Academy of Medicine reports marijuana use does
not cause violent behaviour, provoke insanity, lead to addiction
or promote opiate usage. Anslinger describes the authors as dangerous
and strange.
1944 AD: New York Mayor's
La Guardia Report "The Marijuana problem in the City of New York"
concludes that smoking marijuana does not lead to addiction in the medical
sense of the word, that juvenile delinquency is not associated with marijuana
smoking and that the publicity concerning the catastrophic effects of marijuana
smoking in New York is unfounded.
Back to the top
1944 AD: Anslinger threatens doctors who carry out cannabis research
with imprisonment.
1945 AD: USA 'Newsweek' reports over 100,000 Americans use cannabis.
1948 AD: Anslinger now says cannabis users are peaceful and that
cannabis could be used during a communist invasion, to weaken American
will to fight.
1948 AD: United Nation's Universal
Declaration of Human Rights
1948 AD: Hollywood star Robert Mitchum arrested for cannabis.
1951 AD: UN Bulletin of Narcotic Drugs states over 200 million
cannabis users in the world.
1952 AD: First UK cannabis arrest at Number 11 Club, Soho, London.
1955 AD: Hemp farming outlawed again.
1960 AD: Hippies, Vietnam Veterans, pop fans adopt cannabis.
1961 AD:
UN Treaty 406 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs seeks to outlaw
cannabis use and cannabis cultivation worldwide and eradicate
cannabis smoking within 30 years (by 1991). USA representative is
Anslinger.
1962 AD: President Kennedy sacks Anslinger. Kennedy using cannabis
as a pain relief.
1963 AD: Kennedy assassinated.
1964 AD: Thelin Brothers open first US 'Head Shop'.
1964 AD: THC, tetrahydracannabinol, first isolated
1966 AD: Donovan becomes first UK celebrity to be busted for cannabis.
1967 AD: SOMA Times Petition in the UK urges
legalisation of cannabis. The Beatles sign it. 3,000 people hold
a 'smoke-in' in Hyde Park.. Keith Richards and Mick Jagger of the
Rolling Stones are arrested and imprisoned for cannabis. This prompts
a Times editorial 'Who breaks a butterfly on a wheel?'. The convictions
are quashed on appeal.. In the UK 2,393 persons arrested for cannabis
offences.. In the USA over 3,000 joints mailed to addresses at random
by Abbie Hoffman and the Yippies.
Back to the top
1968 AD: John Lennon arrested for cannabis possession.
1968 AD: 1 November, UK Government
Wootton Report recommends cannabis possession
should not be an offence. "Having reviewed all the material available
to us we find ourselves in agreement with the conclusion reached
by the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission appointed by the Government
of India (1893-94) and the New York Mayor's Committee (1944 - LaGuardia)
that the long-term consumption of cannabis in moderate doses has
no harmful effects."
1968 AD: Campaign to stop US soldiers in Vietnam from taking cannabis
- they switch to heroin.
1969 AD: James Callaghan, UK Labour Prime Minister, rejects the
findings of the
Wootton Report.
1969 AD: George Harrison arrested for cannabis.
1970 AD: Social use of cannabis receives widespread acceptance
despite illegality; policy of decriminalisation sweeps across USA
and Britain.
1970 AD:
LeDain Report (Canada) recommended that
serious consideration be given to the legalisation of personal possession
of marijuana. It finds that cannabis use increases self-confidence,
feelings of creativity and sensual awareness, facilitates concentration
and self-acceptance, reduces tension, hostility and aggression and
may produce psychological but not physical dependence. The report
recommends that possession laws be repealed
1970 AD: R. Keith Stroup founds NORML 'National Organisation for
Reform of Marijuana Laws', in UDSA.
1970 AD: USA Marijuana Transfer Tax declared unconstitutional.
1971 AD: British Misuse of Drugs Act classifies cannabis as a Class
B drug with stiff sentencing. This bans the medical use of cannabis,
ignoring the Wootton Report.
1971 AD: UN Convention on Psychotopic Substances
1972 AD: US President Richard Nixon says 'I am against legalising
marijuana'.
1972 AD: Baan Commission presents report to Dutch Minister of Health
and suggests that cannabis trade below a quarter of a kilo ought
to be considered as a misdemeanour only.
Back to the top
1973 AD: Oregon considering legalisation
1973 AD:
US Shafer Commission, appointed by Nixon, declares
that personal use of marijuana should be decriminalised as should
casual distribution of small amounts for no or insignificant renumeration
1973 AD: UN Convention of Psychotropic Substances: cannabis is
a narcotic.
1974 AD: US Senate report on Marijuana-Hashish Epidemic and its
Impact on US Security claims that cannabis use cause brain damage,
a-motivation and genetic and reproductive defects
1975 AD: Hundreds of US doctors call for more research on cannabis.
1975 AD: Alaska legalises cannabis for personal use. Limit on amount
is one ounce.
1975 AD: After 3 years of campaigning to abolish penal sanctions
for the consumption of drugs, Pannella forces the police to arrest
him, by smoking a joint in public.
1975 AD: Jamaica Studies reveal good health amongst prolific cannabis
users. "No impairment of physiological, sensory and perceptual performance,
tests of concept formation, abstracting ability, and cognitive style,
and tests of memory."
1976 AD: Holland adopts tolerant attitude to cannabis and many
coffee shops and youth centres allowed to sell cannabis.
1976 AD: USA New York Times (Jan 5) declares 'Scientists find nothing
really harmful about pot'.
1976 AD: Ford administration bans medical research on cannabis.
Research on synthetic cannabis analogues allowed to continue. Robert
Randal is the first US citizen to receive cannabis from Federal
supplies made under the Investigational New Drug (IND) Program.
1976 AD: DuPont declares cannabis is less harmful than alcohol
or tobacco and calls for its decriminalisation.
1976 AD: USA President Ford bans medical research on cannabis.
1977 AD: President Carter thinks cannabis should be legalised.
Back to the top
1977 AD: The Australian Senate Standing Committee on Social Welfare
(the Baume Committee) recommends treating drug use as a social /
medical rather than legal problem. Also that criminal sanction of
possession of cannabis be replaced by fines while retaining penalties
for possession of hashish, oil and purified THC.
1978 AD: New Mexico allows cannabis sale for medical use.
1978 AD: The New South Wales Joint Parliamentary Committee upon
Drugs recommends eliminating criminal sanctions for personal use
of cannabis, implementing bond and probation penalties for first
offenders and expunging records upon successful completion of these
punishments. Also suggest retaining penalties for trafficking in
cannabis.
1980 AD: Paul McCartney arrested for cannabis
and spends 10 days in prison in Japan.
1980 AD: Costa Rica study reports good health in cannabis users.
1980 AD: May 10, Smokey Bears in Hyde Park
1981 AD: The Coptic Study claims 'No harm to human brain or intelligence'
through cannabis use.
1982 AD: An Analysis of Marijuana Policy, National Research Council
of the National Academy of Science, concludes that "a policy of
prohibition of supply is preferable only to a policy of complete
prohibition of supply and use"
1983 AD: In the UK over 20,000 convictions for possession.
1983 AD: The USA government (Reagan / Bush)orders American Universities
to destroy all 1966-76 research work on cannabis.
1985 AD: Winters and DiFranza reveal radioactive material in tobacco
may account for half the lung cancer deaths; no radioactive material
in cannabis.
1986 AD: 8 July, UK Drug Trafficking Offences Act introduced to
enable confiscation of assets from drug dealers
Back to the top
1987 AD: The USA Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy says: "Cannabis
can be used on an episodic but continual basis without evidence
of social or psychic dysfunction. In many users the term dependence
with its obvious connotations, probably is mis-applied... The chief
opposition to the drug rests on a moral and political, and not toxicologic,
foundation".
1988 AD: 6 September :
DEA chief administrative judge, Judge Young, rules the US government should
allow the medicinal use of cannabis. He says "Marijuana in its natural form, is one of
the safest therapeutically active substance known to man". DEA rejects report.
1988 AD: 20 December,
UN Convention against illicit traffic in narcotic and psychotropic substances,
Vienna, includes cannabis
1988 AD: UK 23,229 people arrested for cannabis offences.
1989 AD: Presidents Reagan and Bush declare war on cannabis; shops
selling smoking apparatus outlawed. Urine testing introduced. Recriminalisation,
asset and property seizure, armed forces, prison camps, 'Just Say
No' campaign, PFDA, DARE, tobacco and nuclear subsidies. Price -
per - ounce cannabis worth more than gold. Worldwide prohibition
entices organised crime to take control of the cannabis market and
make huge profits. Reagan declares victory in War on Drugs. Secretary
of State James A Baker reports global war on narcotic production
is 'clearly not being won'.
1990 AD: Jack Herer, in his book 'The Emperor Wears No Clothes'
offers $10,000 reward to anyone who can disprove his assertion that
hemp can 'save the planet'.
1990 AD: Alaska recriminalises cannabis possession
1990's AD: USA voters pass regional measures to allow medicinal
use of cannabis. Interest in this and other uses of hemp add new
support to campaign for the legal right to social / recreational
use of cannabis.
Back to the top
1991 AD: THC receptors found in the brain.
1991 AD: UK 40,000 people arrested for cannabis.
1991 AD: 'Mr. Marijuana',
Howard Marks, arrested, taken from Spain
to USA, and given 25 years imprisonment for trafficking in cannabis.
1991 AD: UK Judge Pickles advocates legalisation of drugs..
1991 AD: UK MP Tony Banks (labour) advocates legalisation of cannabis.
1991 AD: IND program dropped in USA.
1992 AD: January 22, California Research Advisory
Panel reports that prohibition has a more harmful effect on society
and the individual than illegal drugs themselves.
1992 AD: February 19, UK Government issue licenses to grow cannabis
for industrial uses or scientific research
1992 AD: "Medicines often produce side effects. Sometimes they
are physically unpleasant. Cannabis too has discomforting side effects,
but these are not physical they are political"... The Economist
March 28th 1992
1992 AD: USA over 340,000 arrests for cannabis.
1992 AD: Australia licenses hemp farm.
1992 AD: US Investigational New Drug (IND) Program dropped.
1992 AD: USA President Clinton admits he smoked cannabis but did
not inhale. Howard Marks admits that he smoked cannabis but never
exhaled.
1992 AD: 17 European Cities sign Frankfurt Charter agreeing to
tolerate social use of cannabis.
1992 AD: USA Jim Montgomery, a paraplegic who smoked cannabis to
relieve muscle spasm, busted for two ounces of marijuana in Oklahoma,
arrested and sentenced to life plus 16 years.
Back to the top
1993 AD: Britain eases restrictions on hemp farming.
Hempcore is first British company to get a license. Hemp clothes
sold in High Street shops. February 19th.
1993 AD: Commander John Grieve of the Metropolitan Police calls
for decriminalisation of cannabis.
1993 AD: Raymond Kendall, Head of Interpol, calls for decriminalisation
of cannabis.
1993 AD: British Law Lord, Lord Woolf calls for legalisation of
cannabis
1993 AD: 22 British MP's call for the establishment of a Royal
Commission.
1993 AD: 44 British MP's call for a Royal Commission.
1993 AD: German High Court in Kruhe rules that cannabis prohibition
is unconstitutional.
1993 AD: 19 British MP's 'welcome' the German court ruling.
1993 AD: 55 British MP's call for cannabis to be recognised and
allowed for treatment of Multiple Sclerosis.
1993 AD: British Home Secretary Michael Howard declares 'War on
drugs' and increases maximum fine for possession of cannabis to
£2,500.
1993 AD: Over 72,000 UK citizens arrested for cannabis offences.
1993 AD: Canada permits a hemp farm in Ontario province.
1995 AD: Holland lowers the amount one can possess
without prosecution to 5 grams (from 30) as a result of powerful
international pressures from neighboring countries.
1995 AD: UK Channel 4 Pot Night (March) and BBC Panorama's High
Risk (April).
1995 AD: UK Home secretary Michael Howard increases penalties for
cannabis offenses.
1995 AD: Clare Short MP (Labour) calls for a Royal Commission on
Cannabis and is reprimanded by her party bosses. (October)
1995 AD: European Cannabis Consumers' Union founded in Amsterdam.
1995 AD: USA Dan Perron forms Cannabis Buyers Club to distribute
cannabis to the sick.
Back to the top
1995 AD: The European Council which defines political guidelines,
orders a study of drug legislation and practice in the Union.
1995 AD: September 16, First CHIC (Cannabis Hemp Information Club)
conference in London.
1995 AD: Under the Clinton administration 1,450,751 people had
been arrested for cannabis, 86% being for possession only
1995 AD: November 11, British journal of the medical profession,
The Lancet, states that "The smoking of cannabis, even long term,
is not harmful to health".
1995 AD: Dutch Policy in the Netherlands Studies
1995 AD: Henrion Commission Report, the official French State Commission
in charge of drug policy supports decriminalisation of cannabis
and calls for a two-year trial period of regulated retail trade
in cannabis. The French Government reject these proposals.
1996 AD: Victoria (Australia) State Council urge
decriminalisation of cannabis.
1996 AD: May 17, Sow the Seeds Day, London. 1996 AD: CLCIA announce
parliamentary candidates in forthcoming General Election
1996 AD: UK Liberal Democrats Party calls for a Royal Commission
on cannabis.
1996 AD: Lord McCluskey calls for consideration of decriminalisation
in UK.
1996 AD: The Institute for the Study of Drug Dependence - Drug
Notes - Cannabis 1996, p.8 says:
"All that can be said definitely is that 1) Cannabis use generally
precedes the use of other illegal drugs. 2) Cannabis use does not
necessarily (or even usually) lead to the use of other illicit drugs."
1996 AD: UK Janet Paraskeno, magistrate and director of National
Youth Agency calls for 'legalisation and not decriminalisation'.
1996 AD: George Howarth MP (Labour) says his party do not want
a Royal Commission because it might conclude that cannabis should
be legalised which a Labour Government would not do anyway.
Back to the top
1996 AD: The Parliament of Luxembourg passes a motion calling for
a program 'of common measures for the liberalization of cannabis
and its derivatives' along with Belgium and the Netherlands, and
the harmonisation of drug laws in Benelux countries.
1996 AD: UK Cannabis Awareness Month (September) on 68th anniversary
of the law.
1996 AD: Ireland announces their plans to use cannabis as fuel
to replace the use of the dwindling supplies of peat
1996 AD: Dutch town council at Delfzij decides to sell cannabis
through their own coffee shop. They name the shop 'Paradox'. Profits
used to provide information campaigns against 'soft drugs' in Dutch
schools. Meanwhile the Dutch close many coffee shops, bowing to
pressures from Germany and France.,br 1996 AD: The Canton of Zurich
calls for legalisation of cannabis.
1996 AD: UK Crown Prosecution Service dropping cases of possession
and cultivation against some ill people (MS) as 'not in the public
interest to proceed'.
1996 AD: California and Arizona pass Propositions allowing the
use of cannabis in the treatment of certain illnesses, Clinton is
re-elected and the FBI threaten Doctors with prosecution.
1996 AD: A Swiss man, Zimmermann, is given a life sentence in the
Maldives, for importing three cannabis seeds, found in his luggage
as he flew in from India.
1996 AD: Legalise Ganja Jamaica formed.
1996 AD: In the New Zealand general election the legalise cannabis
candidate in Mittertond received 30% of the vote. Overall they received
1.4% of the votes, insufficient to gain a seat under proportional
representation.
1996 AD: 100 Italian MP's call for legalisation of cannabis in
Italy.
1996 AD: The Sunday Times, 1 Dec, says that out of 45 UK judges
questioned 16 wanted to see cannabis legalised.
1996 AD: CLCIA offices are destroyed by fire
Back to the top
1996 AD: June, Scottish Nationalist conference votes to allow
cultivation for personal use and research into medical uses of cannabis
Sates "Relatively few adverse clinical effects
from the chronic use of marijuana have been documented in humans.
However, the criminalization of marijuana use may itself be a health
hazard, since it may expose the users to violence and criminal activity."
1997 AD: An 8-year study at the University of California at Los
Angeles (UCLA) School of Medicine, concluded that long-term smokers
of cannabis do not experience a greater annual decline in lung functions
than non-smokers.
Researchers said: "Findings from the present long-term follow-up
study of heavy, habitual marijuana smokers argue against the concept
that the continuing heavy use of marijuana is a significant factor
for the development of [chronic lung disease]"
"No difference were noted between even quite heavy marijuana smoking
and nonsmoking of marijuana."
Volume 155 of the American Journal of Respiratory and Clinical Care
Medicine 1997
1997 AD: January16, A court in Texas, USA, sentences medical marijuana
user, William J. Foster to 93 years imprisonment for cultivation
of one plant.
1997 AD: Two Swiss Cantons decide to legalise possession of cannabis
in small amounts and ask the national Government to do the same.
1997 AD: The German State of Schlewig-Holstein legalise possession
of up to 5 grams of cannabis.
1997 AD: After appeals for clemency from the Swiss Government and
letters from CLCIA supporters, the Maldives releases Zimmermann,
the man given life for three seeds.
1997 AD: Norwich City Council ban the CLCIA from more stalls because
seeds had been given out at previous stalls, the seed being fishing
bait. After a letter campaign the council agree that CLCIA can have
the stall provided they agree not to give out 'anything which can
be used to grow or take an illegal substance'.
Back to the top
1997 AD: In the USA a $2 million study to prove cannabis smoking
can cause cancer fails and announces that it does not. The release
of the report is delayed due to 'lack of supplies'.
1997 AD: Paul Flynn MP introduces an early Day Motion calling on
the Government to recognise the medicinal uses of cannabis and to
make it available in tablet form, also congratulating the citizens
of California and Arizona.
1997 AD: February 11, USA Federal Government Authorities, led
by Barry R. McCaffrey, Director of National Drug Control Policy,
resists the medical supply or cannabis in California and Arizona,
threatening to prosecute Doctor's who prescribe or supply it.
1997 AD: UK Legalise Cannabis Party, sponsored by the
CLCIA, nominates Howard Marks
as Parliamentary Candidate for Legalising Cannabis in the General
Election. He receives an average 1.3% of the vote over the four
constituencies where he stands.
1997 AD: The UK elects a new Labour Government and the Prime Minister,
Tony Blair, says he will not legalise cannabis.
1997 AD: Scottish Kirk (Church) comes out in favour of legalising
cannabis
1997 AD: Rob Christopher, founder of CHIC - the Cannabis Hemp Information
Club - in London, changes his name to Free Rob Cannabis and invites
arrest by distributing cannabis cookies on the steps of the Department
of Heath in London. He is not arrested.
1997 AD: USA marines use helicopters to destroy marijuana crops
in Hawaii despite objections from the people.
1997 AD: The Kaiser Permanente Study (USA) - "Marijuana Use and
Mortality" April 1997 American Journal of Public Health concludes
"Relatively few adverse clinical effects from the chronic use of
marijuana have been documented in humans. However, the criminalization
of marijuana use may itself be a health hazard, since it may expose
the users to violence and criminal activity."
Back to the top
1997 AD: Researchers at the University
of California (UCLA) School of Medicine announced the results of an 8 - year study into the effects of long-term
cannabis smoking on the lungs. In Volume 155 of the American Journal
of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Dr. D.P. Tashkin reported:
"Findings from the present long-term, follow-up study of heavy,
habitual marijuana smokers argue against the concept that continuing
heavy use of marijuana is a significant risk factor for the development
of [chronic lung disease. ..Neither the continuing nor the intermittent
marijuana smokers exhibited any significantly different rates of
decline in [lung function] " as compared with those individuals
who never smoked marijuana. Researchers added: "No differences were
noted between even quite heavy marijuana smoking and nonsmoking
of marijuana."
1997 AD: June, A plaque placed on a park bench in Chapelfield
Gardens in Norwich, commemorates Howard Marks stand as a Legalise
Cannabis Candidate
1997 AD: July, The British Medical Association (BMA) recommends
the provision of medicinal cannabis in the UK.
1997 AD: July, The Attorney General and Minister for Industrial
Relations, Australia, JW Shaw QC MLC, announced the end of prison
sentences for young cannabis offenders, saying that "I believe many
parents would see the imprisonment of their son or daughter for
using cannabis as particularly harmful."
1997 AD: July, SYDNEY MORNING HERALD July 21 1997 p5 reports "A
survey of a traditionally conservative NSW electorate has shown
overwhelming community support for the decriminalisation of cannabis."
New South Wales then decriminalises possession of cannabis - up
to 5 plants, 30 grams of leaf, 3 grms of resin and 2 grams of oil.
Back to the top
1997 AD: August, UK, After the shooting of a five-year old boy
in Bolton in a drug-related attack, Labour MP Brian Iddon calls
for a Royal Commission on drugs with a view to decriminalisation.
The Sun conducts a poll that showed that over 40% of its readers
are in favour of decriminalisation. Labour Home Office spokesman
George Howarth says on Radio 4 News that cannabis causes harm and
that Labour will never have dialogue on legalisation and that the
only solution is to stamp it out.
1997 AD: On September 19th, Marco Pannella is sentenced by the
Rome Court to 4 months imprisonment commuted to 8 months on probation,
for distributing hashish at the Porta Portese.
1997 AD: September, Sir Paul McCartney, ex-Beatle, reconfirms
his call to decriminalise cannabis.
1997 AD: September 28th, UK newspaper
The Independent
on Sunday, starts their committed campaign to decriminalise
cannabis backed by over 100 names of celebrities, doctors, academics etc.
1997 AD: September 28th, A picnic in Chapelfield Gardens, Norwich,
to commemorate the sad prohibition laws is attended by over 100
people and cannabis is openly smoked on film by TV cameras. On this
the 69th anniversary of the Dangerous Drugs Act, Rob Christopher
and some 300 others gather in Hyde Park, London, to distribute cannabis
cakes free to medical users. Rob then unsuccessfully attempted to
turn himself in to the police.
1997 AD: October 8, Lord Bingham of Cornhill, the most senior judge
in England and Wales backed calls for a public debate on the legalisation
of cannabis. Just days after Jack Straw, the Home Secretary, ruled
out moves to legalise cannabis
1997 AD: November 5, EU Parliament Committee on Civil Liberties
suggests that soft drugs should be legalised
Back to the top
1997 AD: December 3, The French secretary of State for Public Health,
Bernard Kouchner, in favor of the supply of heroin to people suffering
from severe heroin addiction. He also supports the medical application
of cannabis, according to an interview with Dr Kouchner MD in the
newspaper Liberation.
1997 AD: December 11, Independent on Sunday hold their "Should
cannabis be decriminalised?" conference in Westminster, London.
Although all the MPs have been invited only 5 turn up. The conference
was overwhelmingly in favour of legalisation
1997 AD: December 19th, DEA formally asked the Department of Health
and Human Services to conduct "a scientific and medical evaluation
of the available data and provide a scheduling recommendation" for
marijuana and other cannabinoid drugs. This DEA request of HHS means
that the DEA has for the first time made its own determination that
sufficient grounds exist to remove marijuana from Schedule I of
the Controlled Substances Act (CSA). Schedule I is supposed to be
limited to hard drugs with addictive propensities and with no legitimate
medical usage.
1997 AD: December 20, British Home Secretary, Jack Straw (Labour)
is told by the Daily Mirror that his son, William, sold 10 pounds
worth of cannabis to a reporter Dawn Alford. Straw immediately escorts
his own son to a police station to turn himself in. The lad is cautioned
several weeks later.
1998 AD: March, Madrid - European and American
scientists defended medical marihuana at an International Symposium
on Cannabis and the Brain held at the Fundacion Ramon Areces. According
to them, the plant is effective in treating people with cancer and
multiple sclerosis, but is not addictive.
1998 AD: Australia, March, Victoria's police commissioner, Mr
Neil Comrie, has admitted the fight against drugs has failed and
is set to introduce a radical statewide plan to keep drug users
out of courts.
Back to the top
1998 AD: Conservative MP David Prior becomes the third British
MP to publicly admit having smoked cannabis. He is against legalisation.
1998 AD: MORE than 100 French artists and intellectuals signed
a petition admitting to taking soft drugs and offering themselves
for prosecution.
1998 AD:
March 28 About 20,000 people marched from Hyde Park to Trafalgar Square in
the Decriminalise Cannabis March organised by the
Independent on Sunday, CLCIA
and others. Speakers in the Square included
Howard Marks,Rosie Boycott,
Paul Flynn MP and Caroline Coon. The new UK Anti-Drugs Coordinator,
Keith Hallawell, arrogantly stated that the march was a Red Herring
(irrelevant).
1998 AD: UK, Times 24 March 1998, A judge allowed a liver transplant
patient to go free after he admitted growing and using cannabis
to ease his pain. Sympathising with him, Judge John Hopkin said:
"I accept that's why you were growing it; to relieve the considerable
pain you must suffer. That is against the law as it stands at the
present time, but there is very substantial mitigation in your case."
Richard Gifford, 49, a father of 6 was given a two year conditional
discharge at Nottingham crown court after pleading guilty to producing
and possessing cannabis. The judge said "Whether this substance
should be obtained by prescription is a matter for parliament, but
it does seem from a number of cases that appear before me that it
is benefit to a number of persons." Paddy Tipping, PPS to Jack Straw,
the Home secretary said the government has no plans to decriminalise
cannabis "People like Judge Hopkin say the acknowledge there is
a valuable medical effect, but there has been no compelling research
done to suggest that".
1998 AD: April, Czech Republic - President Vaclav Havel vetoes
a law banning possession of drugs for personal use and sent it back
to Parliament, citing human rights concerns. "The President reached
the opinion that the law would lead to the prosecution of victims
rather than culprits," said spokesman Ladislav Spacek. Drug experts
have warned that the legislation could lead to an increase in crime
and drug prices and a decline in the willingness of addicts to be
cured. - Reuters
Back to the top
1998 AD: 4 April, A man accused of growing and giving cannabis
to his wife, a multiple sclerosis sufferer, was cleared by a jury's
majority verdict of cultivating, cultivating with intent to supply,
and supplying cannabis. Cab driver Alan Blythe, 52, of Runcorn,
Cheshire, had used the defence of duress of circumstances, which
the jury at Warrington Crown Court accepted. He claimed he had grown
the cannabis and supplied it to his wife Judith, 48, because he
was afraid that without it the acute symptoms of MS could trigger
her suicide. The jury ignored the judge's suggestion that Mr Blythe
had failed to prove duress of circumstances for the charge of cultivation.
But they followed this advice in relation to possession, for which
Mr Blythe was fined £100.
1998 AD: 21 April,
Belgium officially decriminalises cannabis
after a decision by Minister de Clerck of Justice. That is you will
not be prosecuted for possession for personal consumption.
1998 AD: SAN FRANCISCO April 22, 1998 -- A San Francisco marijuana
club reopened under another name just a day after a court order
shut down its predecessor.
1998 AD: Italy decriminalises possession of drugs and permits small
scale cultivation of cannabis for own use.
1998 AD: Danny Tungate polled 7.6% of the vote as a Legalise Cannabis
Candidate in the UK local elections, Catton Grove ward, Norwich
1998 AD: June 12, The UK Government has granted a license to grow
and possess cannabis for the purposes of medical trials, to Dr Geoffrey
Guy of GW Pharmaceuticals. The crop at a secret location in south-east
England, is guarded by electrified razor-wire fences, security cameras
and guard dogs.
1998 AD: Whilst US Federal Authorities make threats and arrests
of Californian doctors who recommend cannabis and force the closure
of most medical marijuana clubs in the state, Oakland by-pass federal
law by appointing medical marijuana suppliers as deputies thereby
making them immune from arrest.
Back to the top
1998 AD: Germany, A petition of 30 thousand signatures organised
by the "Selbsthilfegruppe Cannabis als Medizin" in Berlin was handed
in to the Senat of Berlin in March 1998. All governing parties (CDU,
SPD, PDS and Bündnis 90 / Die Grünen) discussed the issue and unanimously
support it!
The signaturess being collected currently, will be handed to the
"Petitionsausschuss des Deutschen Bundestages" together with the
30 thousand from Berlin.. ACM, Arbeitsgemeinschaft Cannabis als
Medizin (Association for Cannabis as Medicine ) 1998 AD: June 5;
Colin Davies acquitted of cultivation in the UK after informing
the jury of his medical need and despite instructions from the judge
that they had to rule on law and evidence alone. See
Rights of Jurors.
1998 AD: A group of Welsh Cannabis Smokers headed by Chris Rawley
lays prosecution papers upon Jack Straw, Tony Blair, Lord Bingham,
a Crown Court Judge and Tenby Magistrates, in the process of a public
prosecution for crimes against humanity and peace, and crimes against
children, for upholding an illegal prohibition of cannabis.
1998 AD: September 5, Release and
The Lindesmith Instituteorganise the symposium "Options for Control in the 21st Century",
with experts from around the world gathering in London.
1998 AD: October,
CLCIA Chairman challenges local Judge on cannabis safety
1998 AD: November 11, UK.
The House of Lords rule that based upon
the evidence presented for them the Government should make cannabis
available to the sick without further delay, but that they are against
legalisation for recreational use. Jack Straw, Home Secretary, immediately
rejects the House of Lord's Report saying that cannabis will not
be made available until a suitable pharmaceutical standard preparation
has been thoroughly tested.
Back to the top
1998 AD: November, "We.. say
that on the medical evidence available, moderate indulgence in cannabis
has little ill-effect on health, and that decisions to ban or legalise
cannabis should be based on other considerations.":
The Lancet, vol 352, number 9140, November 14 1998
1998 AD:
December 24: Prince Charles tells a sufferer of Multiple Sclerosis that
he has heard that cannabis can help.
1999 AD: January 21,
USA: Medicinal Marijuana Advocate, Steve Kubby and Wife Busted
1999 AD: February 23,
UK: 55-year-old arthritis sufferer jailed for one year for using cannabis
to relieve his pain.
1999 AD: March 4,
ALASKA: Medical Marijuana Law Starts
1999 AD: March 15,
USA: Federal Judge Gives OK to Pot Case
1999 AD: March 21,
USA: Government Study Labels Marijuana A Useful Medicine
1999 AD: March 21,
Only 8 People Can Legally Use Pot As Medicine
1999 AD: March 23,
GERMANY: Health Minister Supports Medical Marihuana
1999 AD: March 30,
CANADA: Pot Users Take Fewer Road Risks Than Drunks Study Says
1999 AD: April 1,
USA: Farmers Lobby to Legalize the Growing of Hemp
1999 AD: April 7,
USA: Florida Supreme Court Hears Medical Marijuana Case
1999 AD: March, The
LEGALISE CANNABIS ALLIANCE becomes
an official political party in the UK.
1999 AD: April 9,
UK: Pro-Cannabis Lobby To Stand in Norwich
1999 AD: April 23,
SWITZERLAND: Legalising Cannabis
1999 AD: May 1,
Many thousands march for legalisation around the world
1999 AD: May 6,
UK: Local Election Results, May 6 1999,
Legalise Cannabis Alliance candidates poll average 3.5%.
1999 AD: May 10,
USA: NV Assembly Bill Eases Marijuana Penalties
Back to the top
1999 AD: May 20,
UK Government objects to cannabis bill 95 MPs support
MM bill. Eric Mann's parole revoked to silence him.
1999 AD: June 9,
CANADA: Two Patients Get Federal Go-Ahead To Smoke Pot
1999 AD: June 11,
US Kentucky: Hemp Museum Opens Doors To History Of Versatile Plant
1999 AD: June 11,
NEW ZEALAND: Advice To Review Dope Law Repeated
1999 AD: June 13,
UK: Cannabis Inhalers In First Legal Health Test
1999 AD: June 21,
CANADA: Compassion Club To Grow Pot In Homes Of Members
1999 AD: June 21,
SCOTLAND: Doctors Back Legalising Cannabis
1999 AD: June 24,
JAMAICA: Official Encourages Cultivation Of Hemp
1999 AD: June 30,
UK: Jails Chief Says Drug Test Regime Is Useless
1999 AD: September 6,
UK: MS Patients Recruited To Test Cannabis Pill
1999 AD: Oct. 14,
Kingston, Jamaica, The Jamaican Senate has unanimously approved a resolution
establishing a commission to explore the decriminalisation of marijuana.
1999 AD: Nov 25, The
Legalise Cannabis Alliance candidate in the Kensington and Chelsea By-election,
Colin Paisley gained 141 votes, 8th out
of 18 candidates.
2000 AD: Jan 12,
CANADA: Hepatitis C Patient Wins Right To Smoke Pot
2000 AD: March 6,
UK: First Conference Of The Legalise Cannabis Alliance
2000 AD: March 25,
UK: Inquiry Calls For Softer Line On Hard Drugs - But Blair Says No
2000 AD: March 29,
SWITZERLAND: Swiss Parliament Legalises Cannabis
2000 AD : March 30,
Malaysian Gets Life For Growing Cannabis Plant
2000 AD: April 4,
MALAWI: Minister Steps Up Campaign To Legalise Marijuana
2000 AD: May 4,
The Legalise Cannabis Alliance fields 5 candidates in Norwich local elections
(Sarah Homes, Mick Pryce, Hugh Robertson, Trevor Smith, Tina Smith), one in Peterborough (Marcus
Davies). Derrick Large receives over 400 votes in the Romsey by-election
won by a Liberal Democrat.
Back to the top
2000 AD: May 6, Hundreds of thousands of people
march for the end of the War on Cannabis
2000 AD: June 28,
CANADA: Medical Pot Grower Cleared
2000 AD: June 28,
NETHERLANDS: Dutch cannabis vote irks cabinet
2000 AD: July 17,
USA CA: Federal Judge Clears Way for Oakland Club to Distribute Pot to Seriously Ill Patients
2000 AD: July 31,
CANADA: Pot Prohibition Unconstitutional, Rules Court Of Appeals
2000 AD: August 1:
UK: Rheumatoid Arthritis Treatment From Cannabis
2000 AD: August 15,
USA CA: Appeals Court Approves Marijuana As Medicine
2000 AD: September 6,
EUROPE: Dutch, Swiss and German Governments To Act on Marijuana
2000 AD: September 8,
USA CA: Doctors' Rights Backed Under Pot Law
2000 AD: September 9,
GUAM: High Court Ruling Backs Rastafarian's Sacrament - Cannabis
2000 AD: September 14,
USA CA: Feds Rule Doctors May Recommend Pot
2000 AD: September 28,
UK: MS Sufferer Cleared Of Cannabis Charge
2000 AD: October,
Canadian Government Will Legalize Medical Marijuana Use
2000 AD: October 20,
UK: Cannabis Less Harmful Than Aspirin, Says Scientist
2000 AD: November 24,
USA: CA: Study Of Pot's Benefits To AIDS Patients Gets DEA's Blessing
2000 AD: December 22,
CANADA: Legal Marijuana Operation Opens
2001 AD: 4 January,
CANADA: Firm Grows Medical Pot In Mine Shaft
2001 AD: 19 January,
BELGIUM: Seen Decriminalising Cannabis Use
2001 AD: 10 March,
SWITZERLAND: Move To Legalise Cannabis
2001 AD: 21 March,
MEXICO: Leader Backs Call To Legalize Drugs
2001 AD: 22 March,
UK: Lords Urge Legal Use Of Cannabis
2001 AD: 7 April,
CANADA: Gravely Ill To Get Medical Pot
Back to the top
2001 AD: 26 April,
USA: Legalize Marijuana, New Mexico Governor Urges
2001 AD: 11 June,
Pot Smokers Just As Healthy - Study
2001 AD: 25 June,
UK: Home Secretary Praises Cannabis Scheme
2001 AD: 1 July,
UK: Drug Czar Recants: Cannabis Use Does Not Lead To Heroin
2001 AD: 4 July,
CANADA: Legal-Marijuana Users To Get Photo Id Cards
2001 AD: 5 July,
UK: In One Part Of London, Police Turn Blind Eye To Marijuana To Target Harder Crime
2001 AD: 19 August,
FIJI: Marijuana a Fiji Election Issue: A Fijian high chief has said his
people should be shot dead if found planting marijuana
2001 AD: 13 September,
FRANCE: Koucher Opposes Drugs Law
2001 AD: 20 October,
THE NETHERLANDS: Dutch Government Plans To Put Cannabis On Prescription
2001 AD: 14 December,
INDONESIA: Marijuana Trafficker Gets Death Sentence
2001 AD: 16 December,
UK: Study Finds No Cannabis Link To Hard Drugs
2002 AD: 25 January,
NORWAY: Commission Set To Call For Decriminalization
2002 AD: 16 February,
KENYA: Hashish Traffickers Jailed For 45 Years
2002 AD: 9 March,
UK: Lib Dems back radical drug reforms
2002 AD: 12 March,
CANADA: Doctors Want Marijuana Decriminalized
2002 AD: 14 March,
UK: Reclassify Cannabis, Says Official Report
2002 AD: 1 June,
MEXICO: Chihuahua Considers Legalizing Pot
2002 AD: 29 June,
PHILIPPINES: Death For Marijuana
2002 AD: 10 July,
David Blunkett's Announcement of reclassification of Cannabis, and
Oliver Letwin's reply in Parliament
2002 AD: July,
Australian Police Close Cannabis Cafe.
2002 AD: July, UK Drugs
Tsar Hellawell Resigns Over Plans To Reclassify Cannabis Possession.
Back to the top
2002 AD: July,
Canadian Judge Says Medical Cannabis Is Not Illegal.
2002 AD: August, Israeli
Government Approves Use Of Cannabis By Terminally Ill.
2002 AD: October, Colin
Davies Who Opened The Dutch Experience Cannabis Cafe In Stockport,
UK, Is Sentenced To Three Years In Prison For Cannabis Offences.
2002 AD,
November: Kenya Considers Legalising Bhang.
2002 AD: November,
UK Doctors Announce Cannabis Extracts Used In Trials On MS And Pain Patients Proving Effective.
2002 AD: November,
Czech Doctors Claim Cannabis Helps Sufferers Of Parkinson's Disease.
2002 AD: December,
US Study Defies Gateway Theory That Cannabis Use Leads To Use Of Hard Drugs.
2002 AD: December,
Canadian Judge Orders Police To Return Medical Cannabis.
2002 AD: December UK,
Oakland, US, City Authorities Deputise Medical Marijuana Club Founders.
2003 AD: February,
US Jurors Become Angry That Trial Judge Had Not Informed Them That Ed Rosenthal
Was Deputised by City Authorities in Oakland, after they convicted him of cultivation.
2003 AD: February,
UN Narcotics Control Board Questions Canada's Policy On Use Of Marijuana.
2003 AD: February,
US Police Arrest 55 Suppliers Of Cannabis Paraphernalia.
2003 AD: March,
Pharmacies in The Netherlands Sell Medical Cannabis More Expensive
Than Many Coffeeshops.
2003 AD: March,
Danish Drug Dealers Go On Strike
2003 AD: March,
JAMAICA: Bill To Legalise Ganja For Private Use
2003 AD: April,
RUSSIA: Nostalgic Small Town Puts Cannabis On Its Flag
Back to the top
source: Electronically Dristributed Files
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Europe:
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Canada:
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USA:
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Australia:
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2005 IACM 3rd Conference on Cannabinoids in Medicine:
in Leiden, on 9-10 September 2005, The International Association for Cannabis
as Medicine in cooperation with the Office for Medicinal Cannabis of the Dutch Health
Ministry and the University of Leiden would like to invite you to participate
in the 2005 Meeting of the IACM on September 9-10, 2005 at Leiden University, The Netherlands.
Read more>>
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