The Citizen (Gauteng)

Debate rages in court whether dagga is gateway to harder drugs

- Rorisang Kgosana

The theory that cannabis was a gateway to harder drugs was a theory to scare the world and justify criminalis­ation of the plant.

Taking the stand on day six of the “dagga trial” at the North Gauteng High Court yesterday, defence expert witness Professor David Nutt said the popular theory has not proven that cannabis users will end up using hard drugs.

The hearing comes after Jules Stobbs and Myrtle Clarke, better known as the “dagga couple”, challenged the court to legalise the substance after they were arrested for possession and dealing in marijuana in 2010.

Nutt, a British psychiatri­st and neuropsych­opharmacol­ogist specialisi­ng in harmful effects of drugs on the brain, elaborated on the effects of the illegal substance.

“People who smoke cannabis are likely to smoke tobacco. Does that mean tobacco is a gateway drug to cannabis?

“One thing that is clear, is that people who deal drugs want drug users to be on something more addictive and dependent than cannabis. People who use canna- bis meet dealers who sell harder drugs,” Nutt explained.

To avoid exposure to harder drugs, Nutt used the Netherland­s as an example, where communitie­s were introduced to cannabis coffee shops.

“They knew their kids would be interested in experiment­ing with cannabis. They use coffee shops to encourage young people to go somewhere and get cannabis so they would not be subjected to offers of harder drugs. It was designed to stop the gateway.

“If the [dependency] gateway

The legal system would be making a big mistake if dagga is legalised.

theory were true, there would be a much higher usage of heroin in the Netherland­s. It is the prohibitio­n of cannabis that is a gateway to harder drugs. Not the drug itself,” Nutt testified.

But founder of Oasis of Hope Rehab Centre in Arcadia, Trevor Buckland, rejected Nutt’s conclusion­s, saying most of his patients were first introduced to drugs through smoking cannabis, as it was easily available.

“Contrary to what our learned friend said today, cannabis is a gateway drug,” he said.

Trevor Buckland Founder of Oasis of Hope Rehab Centre

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