20/04/2007 16:00:00
Canada: Protest smokes up the joint
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`Puff, puff, puff' is chanted at orderly pro-pot rally as police watch
from sidelines.
Matt Mernagh strictly followed every rule and regulation before publicly
lighting his giant spliff.
Days ago, he notified Yonge-Dundas Square authorities of his wish to
demonstrate for the legalization of marijuana.
Similarly, he registered with the Toronto Police Service event
co-ordinator and personally informed officers at 52 Division.
"I said the Toronto Hash Mob will be at Yonge and Dundas celebrating
420," Mernagh recalls, using a street term that originally referred to
an after-school hour of communal smoking, and means the continent-wide
April 20 day of pot advocacy.
Then Mernagh did something he says he knows to be "100 per cent illegal."
At 4:20 p.m. yesterday, he flourished a giant marijuana cigarette, what
he called a "cannon," lit it and inhaled. Thirty or so like-minded
supporters chanted "puff, puff, puff" and waved Canadian flags with a
cannabis leaf, instead of maple leaf, at the centre.
"A Cannabis Control Board of Ontario is basically what I'm calling for,"
Mernagh said, as celebrants continued to share joints to the smiles of
passersby, and as police on foot and bicycle kept their distance.
A CCBO would work much like the LCBO, offering cannabis consumers a
regulated cannabis supply at government stores, he said.
Nobody was about to arrest such a polite and diminutive protester.
Mernagh, 33, has suffered osteoarthritis since he was 17 and smokes pot
partly to ease "excruciating pain," he said.
"My bones are over twice my age," he said without self-pity in the
bright sunshine. "The discs in my back are degenerating really bad."
Medicinal use of marijuana is legal with a Health Canada permit but
getting a permit is an arduous process, Mernagh said. He said he is
perhaps two weeks away from getting his.
Another problem is paying for the dope, he said. Documents obtained
under the Freedom of Information Act show that Ottawa sells medicinal
marijuana at a 1,500 per cent mark-up from the price it pays, the
Canadian Press reported this week.
"I'm a long-standing medicinal marijuana user at the Toronto Compassion
Centre," Mernagh said, referring to the charity that helps people
suffering from conditions that marijuana is known to relieve.
"I'm fighting for the full legalization of cannabis because I believe
that a lot of my friends that aren't disabled should have the same right
to use cannabis as I do."
Fellow demonstrators, some wearing Toronto Hemp Company clothing, voiced
agreement.
One identifying himself as Davin, 29, from Hamilton, handed out "Scratch
and Spliff" marijuana-scented air freshener provided by Brand Novelty
Co. in Scarborough.
"Happy 420," he said cheerfully. "It's our day today. We live for the we
http://www.thestar.com/News/article/205701
Source:
http://www.ukcia.org/news/shownewsarticle.php?articleid=12467
Author:
Toronto Star via UKCIA
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