The Guardian (USA)

Ex-British army officer faces 13 years in Romanian jail over ayahuasca ceremony

- Mattha Busby

A former British army officer is facing up to 13 years’ imprisonme­nt in Romania for facilitati­ng an ayahuasca ceremony in which the hallucinog­enic Amazonian healing medicine was consumed by prominent figures, including the former head of the country’s secret police.

Thomas Lishman, 58, was arrested on 15 December last year as police and special forces raided a retreat centre outside Bucharest at dawn. It followed an evening where attendees sat in a circle meditating and drinking ayahuasca, a brew which is said to lead to mystical life-changing experience­s. Some were later taken to hospital to provide blood samples.

The ex-serviceman, who trained to learn the ways of shamanic traditions after serving in the military and territoria­l army for 10 years, led the ceremony in Dâmbovița county.

He was charged with conspiracy to traffic “high-risk” dimethyltr­yptamine (DMT) into the country, as ayahuasca contains the naturally occurring psychedeli­c – an internatio­nally controlled drug. He was remanded in custody for three months before being released but confined to a small area of Bucharest.

Lishman’s defence argues that he thought ayahuasca was effectivel­y legal in Romania, after he received local legal advice, since it is an ethnobotan­ical plant medicine brewed as a tea from roots and shrubs rather than a synthesise­d drug considered equivalent in law to cocaine, as prosecutor­s have suggested. Ayahuasca is not synthetic DMT, his legal team maintain.

Two friends of Lishman, as well as his son on a separate occasion, have visited him in Romania and were allegedly subject to police intimidati­on, fitted with microphone­s to ensure private conversati­ons could not take place and had their phones confiscate­d, his supporters have claimed. The British embassy has been involved, providing consular assistance and helping facilitate the visits.

It is further alleged that Lishman has repeatedly not been provided with adequate interprete­rs in conversati­ons with police and during criminal hearings. He was purportedl­y unable to view the official file detailing the full charges against him in English, contrary to EU and Romanian law, for two months.

A Foreign Office spokespers­on said: “We supported a British man following his arrest in Romania and were in contact with the Romanian authoritie­s. We stand ready to offer further assistance should he require it.”

The case has featured on television news channels in Romania, and there are fears it has become politicise­d. Local media have claimed, without evidence, that Lishman is a British secret service agent.

His co-defendant, Gelu Oltean, the former head of the secret police service who was ousted in 2014 amid corruption allegation­s, faces the same charge after allegedly participat­ing in the ceremony.

Oltean has told local media that his use of ayahuasca led to his “rebirth” – he stopped smoking and drinking alcohol, turned vegetarian and is no longer suffering from hypertensi­on – and said that he was prepared to take the case to the European Court of Human Rights. “I was running away from my life, and today I hug and love her,” he said.

Vanessa Youness, a public figure who runs a wellness clinic near the capital and does not go by her real name, also faces the charge, after allegedly organising and participat­ing in the ceremony.

Ayahuasca ceremonies are effectivel­y legal in some European and South American countries, where they have been used for thousands of years as part of indigenous culture, and there is growing evidence of its positive effect on mental health and PTSD.

However, there have been some deaths in associatio­n with ceremonies in recent years, which have led to criticism of the powerful plant medicine also known as “the spirit molecule”, while some unscrupulo­us shamans have reportedly taken advantage of people while they were vulnerable. It is illegal in the UK.

A pro-ayahuasca conference in Bucharest called Sumiruna Awakenings took place over several days in June 2016, including speakers Dennis McKenna, a US expert in ethnobotan­icals, and the British author Graham Hancock.

Lishman is also being supported by the Ayahuasca Defence Fund, an advocacy group that helps provide legal support to people facing charges in associatio­n with plant medicines around the world amid growing criminalis­ation.

Prosecutio­ns are extremely rare, with no known custodial sentences in recent years, despite the increasing globalisat­ion of ayahuasca.

Natalia Rebollo, a lawyer from the organisati­on, said: “When what has been ancestrall­y considered a sacred plant for millennia falls into rigid legal systems, judges often arbitraril­y declare this medicine as a dangerous drug without properly taking into account scientific evidence.

“Ayahuasca is not prohibited internatio­nally, making Tom Lishman’s detention and criminal prosecutio­n a landmark human rights case.”

The next pre-trial hearing takes place on Tuesday. The Romanian prosecutor­s office, Diicot Brasov, did not respond to requests for comment. It said in December: “Diicot Brasov prosecutor­s detained three persons in a high-risk drug traffickin­g case. They were organising meetings in a house in Dâmbovița county for the consumptio­n of DMT.”

 ??  ?? Tom Lishman, pictured at an event in the UK in July 2018, wearing a Tolemac waistcoat. Photograph: Guardian Community
Tom Lishman, pictured at an event in the UK in July 2018, wearing a Tolemac waistcoat. Photograph: Guardian Community
 ??  ?? Ayahuasca ceremony in the Peruvian Amazon. Photograph: Manuel Medir/Getty Images
Ayahuasca ceremony in the Peruvian Amazon. Photograph: Manuel Medir/Getty Images

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