Sunday, November 08, 2009 4:50 PM

General News

'Ja cannot legalise ganja'

Elliott cites anti-doping links at JADCO symposium

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Elliott... if we legalised it we'd be laughed at because we signed the international conventions (Photo: Bryan Cummings)

Being a signatory to three international anti-doping conventions means Jamaica cannot legalise the use of marijuana, according to doctor of sports medicine, Herb Elliott.

Elliott was speaking at the opening of the Jamaica Anti-Doping Commission's (JADCO's) two-day symposium at the Knutsford Court Hotel in Kingston yesterday.

Jamaica, in addition to being the 16th country to ratify the UNESCO International Convention for Doping in Sport, is also a signatory to all three Geneva Conventions on the use of psychotropic drugs as well as the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) code.

"Therefore we could not legalise it (ganja)," Elliott told the Observer.

He said the option would be to decriminalise the use of the substance, as is the case with other countries such as The Netherlands.

"Decriminalising it would be to put some limits on its use, so for instance you wouldn't lock up a guy if he had one cigarette, but if he was trafficking, selling or growing it you could put the law into force. But you would not send anyone to jail because he had one spliff," Elliott said.

"(If we legalised it) we would be laughed at because we signed the international conventions and the government has always had its international commitments, and I don't know if the people who are pushing for do not realise we have signed these three conventions," he added.

The International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) Medical & Doping Commission member, in the meantime, would like to see a law banning all forms of smoking at sporting events.

He noted the specific case of the Jamaican athlete who tested positive for marijuana which he said was caused from second-hand smoke inhalation.

"When you go to the stadium (for instance) you could get drunk from sitting inside...," Elliott said, referring to the proliferation of persons who smoke substances, including marijuana, at the National Stadium during sporting events.
"That means that my footballers out there would not get contaminated," Elliott noted.

- DB

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